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Supreme Court rejects appeal over pickup seized at border
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Supreme Court rejects appeal over pickup seized at border
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Supreme Court rejects appeal over pickup seized at border
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WASHINGTON Gerardo Serrano ticked off the border crossing agents by taking some photos on his phone. So they took his pickup truck and held onto it for more than two years.
Only after Serrano filed a federal lawsuit did he get back his Ford F-250. Now he wants the Supreme Court to step in and require a prompt court hearing as a matter of constitutional fairness whenever federal officials take someone s property under civil forfeiture law.
The justices could consider his case when they meet privately on Friday.
It s a corner of the larger forfeiture issue, when federal, state or local officials take someone s property, without ever having to prove that it has been used for illicit purposes.
By MARK SHERMAN | Associated Press | Published: April 12, 2021 WASHINGTON Gerardo Serrano ticked off the border crossing agents by taking some photos on his phone. So they took his pickup truck and held onto it for more than two years. Only after Serrano filed a federal lawsuit did he get back his Ford F-250. Now he wants the Supreme Court to step in and require a prompt court hearing as a matter of constitutional fairness whenever federal officials take someone s property under civil forfeiture law. The justices could consider his case when they meet privately on Friday. It s a corner of the larger forfeiture issue, when federal, state or local officials take someone s property, without ever having to prove that it has been used for illicit purposes.