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New York Law Journal
Volume 222, Number 29
Copr. 1999 NLP IP Company
Tuesday, August 10, 1999
The Lawyer's Bookshelf
NEW YORK CRIMINAL AND CIVIL FORFEITURES
By Steven L. Kessler. Gould Publications, Binghamton, N.Y. 998 pages
$39.95
reviewed By Robert J. Aniello
Forfeiture is big business. Utilizing forfeiture laws to stake their
claim to the
proceeds and instrumentalities of illegality, state and federal
governments have
become partners with the mob, drug dealers, prostitutes and now in New
York City
drunk drivers. This governmental zeal to use an additional weapon in
the arsenal
against crime also means big business for defense lawyers.
Author Steven Kessler's comprehensive handbook on the myriad statues
and rules
that make up New York's forfeiture law provides an excellent resource
for
prosecutors and defense attorneys alike. Indeed, his extensive
discussion of
constitutional issues and federal law makes the book's title too
restrictive. In
addition to providing an in-depth discussion of New York's until-now
little- known
statutory scheme, this handbook analyzes dozens of U.S. Supreme Court
and
lower federal court decisions applicable to federal forfeiture issues
and the forfeiture
laws of other states.
Many criminal practitioners, particularly white-collar lawyers, likely
are unaware of
even the existence of New York's extensive array of forfeiture laws.
The author s
apparent experience in this area can help make an expert out of each of
us.
Separate chapters of the handbook are devoted to each of the major and
not-so-
major statutes that New York has enacted over the years and which
recently have
come into vogue by prosecutors. In each chapter, the author discusses
the nature
of the statute, its provision and the case law that interprets and
limits the power
that the Legislature has bestowed on prosecutors and government
officials.
White-collar practitioners, narcotics prosecutors and defenders of
narcotics cases,
DWI lawyers, and even landlord-tenant lawyers faced with troublesome
tenants, will
find useful the analysis of the forfeiture provisions contained in New
York's Civil
Practice Law and Rules, Penal Law and Vehicle and Traffic Law, as well
as his
discussion of the "illegal tenant use" provisions popularly known as
Bawdy House
laws.
The book also includes a handy reprint of the many forfeiture laws and
selected
legislative histories. What will be found most useful, particularly by
prosecutors, are
the almost 400 pages of forfeiture forms largely borrowed by Kessler
from his alma
mater, the Bronx District Attorney's Office.
New York's primary civil forfeiture statute is a uniquely drafted in
personam statute.
In most cases, in personam forfeiture laws, including the more familiar
federal RICO
statute, are used in the context of criminal proceedings. Civil
forfeiture laws
generally contemplate in rem proceedings, or proceedings against
property. New
York's in personam forfeiture provisions contained in Article 13-A are
entirely
separate from criminal proceedings and were designed with a number of
protections
not found in other forfeiture statutes to temper its punishment. One of
the
protections is that a prosecutor who handles a related criminal action
may not
prosecute the civil forfeiture action.
Again demonstrating the separation of New York's civil forfeiture law
from criminal
proceedings, CPLR Article 13-A provides for forfeiture of crime
proceeds, substitute
proceeds and instrumentalities of crimes, but a criminal conviction is
not a
prerequisite for forfeiture. Indeed, the author observes that in 85
percent of forfeiture
cases, the property owner is never charged with a crime.
Mr. Kessler's thorough analysis of Article 13-A includes the statute s
legislative
history, available provisional remedies and pre-proceeding subpoena
practice. He
also provides a useful analysis of the effect or more likely, lack of
effect that a plea
bargain has on a subsequent forfeiture proceeding.
The evolving constititutional law involving the application of the
Double Jeopardy
clause to forfeiture proceedings also is extensively discussed and
analyzed. That
discussion, which is contained in the handbook's section of CPLR
Article 13-A,
warrants its own chapter because it is equally relevant to New York s
other
forfeiture statutes as well as to forfeiture provisions in other
jurisdictions.
Unfortunately, the book's organization makes it likely that this
valuable information
may be overlooked by readers who consult the handbook in connection
with one of
New York's other forfeiture statutes.
This organizational shortcoming extends to much of the other important
federal
case law that Kessler delves into. The extensive research and survey of
cases from
federal courts and the courts of other states that is applicable to
forfeiture statutes
could be more valuable if they were set off in a manner that alerted
the reader to
their applicability. Nevertheless, a user of this handbook will benefit
greatly from the
author's extensive research and his collection of the hundreds of New
York state
court and other decisions that make up this book.
Another New York statute that recently has come into fashion for
separating the
looters from their loot is the Organized Crime Control Act of 1986
(OCCA), a/k/a
"Baby RICO." OCCA is more restrictive than its federal counterpart and
essentially
is a result of New York legislators learning from Washington s
mistakes.
Baby RICO was born 16 years after Congress hatched RICO. Unlike RICO,
OCCA
provides no private right of action. Again, however, the book's title
is too limiting for
Kessler's extensive analysis. In his discussion of OCCA, the author is
not satisfied
with merely examining its forfeiture provisions. He examines OCCA s
legislative
history and its similarities and differences from RICO.
In many sections of the book, this former prosecutor treats us to his
born- again
view of "outrageous" conduct and overzealous misuse of the forfeiture
laws by state
and city officials. Thus, in the preliminary pages, added just prior to
the book s
printing, Kessler explores and criticizes Mayor Giuliani's new
initiative to seize the
vehicles of tipsy drivers.
In discussing other provisions of New York City's Administrative Code,
the author
divulges his anecdotal personal observations of the morass in which one
of his
clients found himself because of the bureaucracy of the police. In
analyzing the
code and the extensive case law it has spawned, he concludes that "the
current
procedures are nothing short of ridiculous, unfair and prejudicial to
the defendant."
(page 178) Like many former prosecutors, he has apparently come a long
way.
Given the myriad forfeiture provisions available to state and local
officials, the
relative restraint in using these provisions in the past is likely to
be lifted soon.
Prosecutors and government officials throughout the county have shown
an
increasing appetite to punish criminals both penally and financially.
From the halls of Princeton-Newport to the apartments of drug dealers
and
prostitutes, to Rudy's clean streets, New York practitioners on both
sides of the
fence will face an increasingly greater need to address forfeiture
issues to fully
represent their clients interests. Rather than starting from scratch,
this handbook,
while not meant for reading on the beach, provides a terrific addition
to a law library.
Robert J. Anello is a litigation partner in Morvillo, Abramowitz,
Grand, Iason &
Silberberg.
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