‘Money-making scheme’: Appeals court likens vehicle forfeiture program to extortion

Melisa Ingram and Robert Reeves are two of three plaintiffs in a class-action lawsuit against Wayne County, Michigan, that claims their due process rights were violated because the county held their seized vehicles for months. On Aug. 31, the U.S. Sixth District of Appeals ruled that their rights were violated. (Courtesy of Institute of Justice)

The U.S. Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals in a unanimous ruling said that a vehicle forfeiture program in Wayne County, Michigan – home to Detroit – violated the due process rights of three people who had their cars impounded by police, which left them without a mode of transportation.

The Institute for Justice filed a lawsuit in 2020 against Wayne County, which would sometimes hold vehicles seized in alleged crimes for four to six months, and sometimes longer, without the opportunity for a hearing to challenge the forfeiture.

“Does this sound like a legitimate way of cleaning up Wayne County?” said Judge Amul Thapar in a concurring opinion. “Or does it sound like a money-making scheme that preys on those least able to fight it? To ask the question is to answer it.”

The court said the county should be having hearings within two weeks of the seizure.

One of the plaintiffs, Melisa Ingram, let her then-boyfriend borrow her car only for him to get busted soliciting a prostitute. The police seized his car, and when Ingram went to try to get it back, Wayne County officials told her she’d have to wait four months for a hearing. In order for her to get her car back right away, she ended up paying $1,355, the lawsuit said.