Monday Noon ~ TheFrontPageCover

TheFrontPageCover
~ Featuring ~  
SCOTUS: States Subject to 
Limits on Seizure, Too
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by Michael Swartz  
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Graham: 'Handful' of GOP senators will 
vote to block Trump's emergency declaration
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{thehill.com} ~ Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) predicted on Friday that a "handful" of Republicans will back a resolution to block President Trump's emergency declaration... to construct the U.S.-Mexico border wall. "A handful. … But there will be enough left to sustain a veto," Graham told Fox News, asked how many Republicans would vote with Democrats in the Senate. Graham didn't offer a specific number for how many of his Republican colleagues he thinks will back the resolution. He said that he would "absolutely not" vote for the Democrat-led resolution, adding that he is "100 percent with the president." Graham, who has emerged as a vocal ally for Trump in the Senate, also accused Democrats of "hypocrisy" on border security and argued they were opposing the president's plan because "they just hate Trump." "I hope Republicans will not reward this, quite frankly," Graham added on Friday...
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New Green Deal About Controlling You 
& Your Money, NOT Climate Change
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One of the greatest absurdities of the so-called New Green Deal proposed then backed away from by socialist-inclined Democrats, is the idea that the nation’s  transportation needs can be met by building high-speed rail everywhere – and getting rid of cars and airplanes... This utopian nonsense supposedly is rooted in a desire to “do something about climate change,” which has become code for destroying civilization’s affluence, seizing control over you and your money and enriching crony opportunists. The timing was exquisite when just days after the New Green Deal was made public, California’s new left-wing Governor Gavin Newsom pulled the plug on the state’s fanciful plan to build a high-speed rail from San Francisco to Los Angeles. Newsom’s sacrilege to the gods of climate change illustrates what happens when socialist utopian dreams bump up against reality. Originally estimated to cost $33 billion, it’s more reasonably predicted to exceed $100 billion today. After 11 years no track has been laid upon which any type of train has rolled, and no one can with a straight face give a date when that might happen... Calif return the 3 billion tax money the govenment gave you. Or did you already spend it.
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Border Rancher Says Trump’s 
Right About Border, ‘It Is a Crisis’
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by Steven Beyer   
{westernjournal.com} ~ The urgency to have a wall built at the border may not seem like a crisis for some, but for those living close to the border, the crisis is all too real... One such person is Kari Wade, who, with her family, owns a ranch just 50 miles from the U.S.-Mexico border. The border rancher recently responded to a Facebook  comment when someone asked, “Where’s the fire” in regards to the urgency of President Trump to build the wall at the U.S.-Mexico border. Her response to the comment has now gone viral. Wade responded to the comment with her own post saying, “Let me tell you where the fire is: The ‘fire’ is finding dead bodies on your ranch.” “The ‘fire’ is having to come home after dark and have to carry a rifle to go feed your livestock after BP tells you that they only caught 9 of the 15 they are looking for,” she added. She goes on to give several other examples of how illegal immigration has impacted her and her family while living close to the border...
Beyond the Rising Tide: Reparations 
for Slavery Have to Be More Than a Symbol 
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by Briahna Gray
{theintercept.com} ~ When Hop-Hop radio host Charlamagne that God asked Sens. scumbag-Cory Booker and lowlife-Kamala Harris if they had a “specific agenda” for black Americans on his show, “The Breakfast Club,” earlier this month, it was clear that neither did... “I have a specific agenda for the American people,” started scumbag-Booker. But for Charlamagne, and many other black Americans, a generalized American agenda isn’t a substitute for a plan that specifically addresses the needs of black folks. “They always say a rising tide lifts all boats,” Charlamagne interrupted, “but we don’t really see that in our communities.” Charlamagne elaborated on this idea during his interview with lowlife-Harris: “I think when it comes to black people in America, Democrats, for whatever reason, when you ask them … usually we get that whole ‘rising tides raise all boats’ or ‘all Americans’ rhetoric, and I think black people just want to hear specific things for them, and I always wonder, ‘Why are people afraid to say what they would specifically do for black people?’” The desire expressed by Charlamagne is understandable and legitimate. After committing overwhelmingly to the Democratic Party for decades, black Americans have seen the racial wealth gap widen, not shrink. As a result, some are increasingly skeptical of the value of programs that aren’t narrowly tailored to accrue to our  benefit...  https://theintercept.com/2019/02/20/2020-candidates-reparations/?utm_source=The+Intercept+Newsletter&utm_campaign=378c165db8-EMAIL_CAMPAIGN_2019_02_23&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_e00a5122d3-378c165db8-131896129
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Iran: Mounting Persecution of Christians
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{gatestoneinstitute.org} ~ The persecution of Christians in Iran in 2018 increased to a new level, according to an in-depth report jointly released by Open Doors, Middle East Concern, Article 18, and Christian Solidarity Worldwide... "The end of 2018 saw an unprecedented wave of raids on private house gatherings, leading to a large number of arrests. Many Christians received prison sentences, or had sentences upheld by the Court of Appeal," noted the report. Despite this roaring abuse, and violations and attacks against Christians being significantly  ratcheted up, the international community continues to label the Iranian government, run by President Hassan Rouhani, as "moderate. What is puzzling is that while the Iranian authorities boast that Christians and other religious minorities are treated fairly under Islam, the Iranian regime is, in fact, increasingly targeting Christians solely for daring peacefully to practice their faith. Even though these actions are frequently  documented, their claims do not match up with the ever-increasing numbers of arrests and punishments suffered by those practicing a religion other than Islam. For example, in a single recent week, more than 100 Christians were arrested. There was also an unprecedented "surge during November and December 2018 as arrests were reported in the cities of Ahvaz, Chalus, Damavand, Hamedan, Hashtgerd, Karaj, Mashhad, Rasht, Shahinshahr and Tehran. In one week alone, one hundred and fourteen Christians were reported to have been arrested."...  https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/13757/iran-persecution-christians
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SCOTUS: States Subject to Limits on 
Seizure, Too
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by Michael Swartz:  While numerous high-profile Supreme Court cases have been decided by the narrowest of 5-4 margins, every so often there comes a slam-dunk case so egregious that the High Court’s right and left wings unite. In this case, all but two concurred with an opinion written by … Ruth Bader Ginsburg. We’ll return to the reasoning for the concurring but different opinions of justices Neil Gorsuch and Clarence Thomas a little later.

At question in the case of Timbs v. Indiana: How far is too far when it comes to asset forfeiture by authorities? As the Ginsburg opinion queried: “Is the Eighth Amendment’s Excessive Fines Clause an ‘incorporated’ protection applicable to the States under the Fourteenth Amendment’s Due Process Clause? Like the Eighth Amendment’s proscriptions of ‘cruel and unusual punishment’ and ‘[e]xcessive bail,’ the protection against excessive fines guards against abuses of government’s punitive or criminal law-enforcement authority.”

The case stemmed from the 2015 arrest of Indiana resident Tyson Timbs, who eventually pleaded guilty to selling heroin to an undercover police officer. While Timbs was sentenced to house arrest and five years’ probation, the state also seized a 2012 Land Rover Timbs had purchased with proceeds from his late grandfather’s life insurance policy. The car, valued at $42,000, was worth over quadruple what the maximum fine for the offense would have been, and that disparity was ruled by two lower Indiana state courts to be excessive.

However, the state appealed to the Indiana Supreme Court, and it overruled the lower courts on their belief that the prohibition on excessive fines found in the Constitution only applied to the federal government — thus, the state of Indiana was within its rights under forfeiture law to seize Timbs’ asset despite it not having been purchased with illegally obtained funds. They argued that, since Timbs had transported the heroin with the car, it was fair game for seizure.

But the state’s case before the Supreme Court was weak from the start, leaving the solicitor general to defend a hypothetical seizure of a luxury car for the offense of driving five miles an hour over the speed limit. Thus, a 9-0 whitewash wasn’t really a surprise.

While both Gorsuch and Thomas agreed with the final decision, Gorsuch added a one-page concurrence that considered whether the case should have been decided based on the Privileges or Immunities Clause rather than by the Due Process clause. Thomas took the point further, writing his own separate opinion that harshly criticized the “due process” logic:

Because the oxymoronic “substantive” “due process” doctrine has no basis in the Constitution, it is unsurprising that the Court has been unable to adhere to any “guiding principle to distinguish ‘fundamental’ rights that warrant protection from nonfundamental rights that do not.” … And because the Court’s substantive due process precedents allow the Court to fashion fundamental rights without any textual constraints, it is equally unsurprising that among these precedents are some of the Court’s most notoriously incorrect decisions … [including] Roe v. Wade[and] Dred Scott v. Sandford.

Thomas’s concurrence, which provides much of the second half of the 26-page opinion, provides a good history lesson on the evolution of law against excessive fines.

Not only was Justice Thomas’s concern regarding proper precedent not answered completely, but as the Wall Street  Journal editorial board pointed out, the Timbs decision also left as a mystery just how outrageous a fine had to be to merit consideration as “excessive.” Surely — and unfortunately — this question will be left to play out in the legal system over the coming years.

The battle over excessive fines, though, is only a small part in the tug-of-war that has pitted law-and-order prosecutors who believe asset forfeiture is a deterrent to crime against civil libertarians who believe it’s a “gigantic law-enforcement scam,” with seizures of significant assets possible under the most circumstantial of evidence.

As our own Arnold Ahlert wrote in 2017, it’s “a process whereby government can seize property and cash they suspect is related to the commission of a crime” [emphasis added]. Note the word “suspect,” which is far different than the word “prove.” Unfortunately, the burden of proof in forfeiture cases is placed on the accused, who have to fight the unlimited resources of the government in order to reclaim what is legally theirs.

Tyson Timbs certainly doesn’t fit the profile of a hero, but he dared to make a stand against government overreach and scored a rare victory. Let’s hope it brings new awareness to the frequent abuses of a system that was supposed to ensure crime didn’t pay but instead became a cash cow for local and state governments.  ~The Patriot Post

https://patriotpost.us/articles/61338?mailing_id=4094&utm_medium=email&utm_source=pp.email.4094&utm_campaign=snapshot&utm_content=body
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