WASHINGTON, Jan 16 (Reuters) - State and local police in the
United States will no longer be able to use federal laws to
justify seizing property without evidence of a crime, U.S.
Attorney General Eric Holder said on Friday.
The practice of local police taking property, including cash
and cars, from people that they stop, and of handing it over to
federal authorities, became common during the country's war on
drugs in the 1980s.
Holder cited "safeguarding civil liberties" as a reason for
the change in policy.
The order directs federal agencies who have collected
property during such seizures to withdraw their participation,
except if the items collected could endanger the public, as in
the case of firearms.
Holder said the ban was the first step in a comprehensive
review the Justice Department has launched of the program.
(Reporting by Julia Edwards; Editing by Bernadette Baum)
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