News (Media Awareness Project) - US MO: Missouri Attorney General Sues Kansas City Police |
Title: | US MO: Missouri Attorney General Sues Kansas City Police |
Published On: | 2000-06-17 |
Source: | Kansas City Star (MO) |
Fetched On: | 2008-09-03 19:03:40 |
MISSOURI ATTORNEY GENERAL SUES KANSAS CITY POLICE BOARD
The Kansas City Board of Police Commissioners is holding $3.4 million in
money and property that rightfully belongs to area county governments and
school districts, Missouri Attorney General Jay Nixon contended in a
lawsuit filed Friday.
Nixon filed the lawsuit in an attempt to require the board to distribute
the money and property, which the Police Department has collected mainly
from seized, abandoned and unclaimed cash and property.
For years the Police Department has kept such proceeds, despite a 1990
ruling by the Missouri Supreme Court requiring the proceeds to be
distributed to local school districts. The funds generally must be
distributed to the county treasurer, the state treasurer or the schools,
depending on the source of the funds.
In 1997 police filed a lawsuit asking the Jackson County Circuit Court to
determine how the proceeds should be divided. The lawsuit claimed that
different and often contradictory laws applied.
That lawsuit was withdrawn in March.
"It's not all seized property," said Dennis Eckold, the police board
president. "It's not all crime-related....It gets difficult to determine."
Police Department attorney Dale Close, who filed the 1997 lawsuit and then
later withdrew it, could not be reached for comment Friday.
None of the money collected has been spent, Eckold said.
"We've been holding it, waiting to be told where it should go," he said.
"We want to cooperate and resolve these issues."
Now that Nixon's lawsuit has been filed, the police board likely will turn
the cash portion of the proceeds in question over to the court until a
decision is made, and explore liquidating other assets, Eckold said.
The attorney general's office met with police attorneys earlier this week
to discuss the issue, Eckold said.
Nevertheless, Police Board attorney Bryan Round said the attorney general's
lawsuit came "truly out of the blue." He said no one from the attorney
general's office had indicated the lawsuit would be filed.
"I haven't seen it, so I can't comment on it," Round said. "We'll look at
the facts, look at the law and take appropriate steps."
In a press release issued Friday, Nixon said the board had a statutory and
constitutional duty to distribute the money in accordance with Missouri
law. "There still is a need to have this money distributed to the proper
agency."
The lawsuit also names Jackson, Clay, Platte and Cass counties as other
potential recipients of the property held by the police board.
To reach Matt Stearns, call (816) 234-4435 or send e-mail to
mstearns@kcstar.com
The Kansas City Board of Police Commissioners is holding $3.4 million in
money and property that rightfully belongs to area county governments and
school districts, Missouri Attorney General Jay Nixon contended in a
lawsuit filed Friday.
Nixon filed the lawsuit in an attempt to require the board to distribute
the money and property, which the Police Department has collected mainly
from seized, abandoned and unclaimed cash and property.
For years the Police Department has kept such proceeds, despite a 1990
ruling by the Missouri Supreme Court requiring the proceeds to be
distributed to local school districts. The funds generally must be
distributed to the county treasurer, the state treasurer or the schools,
depending on the source of the funds.
In 1997 police filed a lawsuit asking the Jackson County Circuit Court to
determine how the proceeds should be divided. The lawsuit claimed that
different and often contradictory laws applied.
That lawsuit was withdrawn in March.
"It's not all seized property," said Dennis Eckold, the police board
president. "It's not all crime-related....It gets difficult to determine."
Police Department attorney Dale Close, who filed the 1997 lawsuit and then
later withdrew it, could not be reached for comment Friday.
None of the money collected has been spent, Eckold said.
"We've been holding it, waiting to be told where it should go," he said.
"We want to cooperate and resolve these issues."
Now that Nixon's lawsuit has been filed, the police board likely will turn
the cash portion of the proceeds in question over to the court until a
decision is made, and explore liquidating other assets, Eckold said.
The attorney general's office met with police attorneys earlier this week
to discuss the issue, Eckold said.
Nevertheless, Police Board attorney Bryan Round said the attorney general's
lawsuit came "truly out of the blue." He said no one from the attorney
general's office had indicated the lawsuit would be filed.
"I haven't seen it, so I can't comment on it," Round said. "We'll look at
the facts, look at the law and take appropriate steps."
In a press release issued Friday, Nixon said the board had a statutory and
constitutional duty to distribute the money in accordance with Missouri
law. "There still is a need to have this money distributed to the proper
agency."
The lawsuit also names Jackson, Clay, Platte and Cass counties as other
potential recipients of the property held by the police board.
To reach Matt Stearns, call (816) 234-4435 or send e-mail to
mstearns@kcstar.com
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