首页 正文

APP下载

全国癫痫哪家医院好(潍坊哪里可以医治癫痫病) (今日更新中)

看点
2025-05-30 02:10:57
去App听语音播报
打开APP
  

全国癫痫哪家医院好-【济南癫痫病医院】,NFauFwHg,东营儿童癫痫治疗的方法都有哪些,东营治疗医院癫痫专病哪家好,德州羊羔疯治疗专科医院,威海癫痫病医院网上预约,济南有治羊癫疯的偏方吗,泰安小孩羊癫疯如何治疗

  全国癫痫哪家医院好   

Gerardo Serrano lives in rural Kentucky for peace and quiet. However, a story involving his truck and a trip across the U.S.- Mexico border suddenly made his life a bit more complicated. "I love my country, but if we have policies like this, forget it. I can't live in a place like this," Serrano says. It all started when Serrano decided to visit his cousin in Mexico. He got in his truck and drove down to Texas. As he reached the border, he took out his phone to snap a couple photos. "A border patrol agent walks by, and so I got his picture," Serrano recalls. What happened next completely took him by surprise. "He opens the door, unlocks my seat belt, and yanks me out of the truck, like some kind of rag doll," he says. "I said, 'Hey listen, I'm an American. You can't do that. I have rights.’" The border agent asked for his phone, but when he refused to give up his passcode, he was suddenly surrounded by five patrol agents searching his truck. "There's a guy that yells out, ‘We got him,’ and he puts his hand out and there was my magazine with five bullets in it." Serrano didn't realize five bullets had been left in the center console. He didn't think it'd be a problem since he had a license to conceal and carry, but then they sent him to a jail cell on the property. "Four hours go by, and then all of the sudden they say, ‘You can go.’" All Serrano had to do was sign a paper. "So, I put my shoes on, I look at the paper, and about the second sentence or so, it says, 'I'm gonna confiscate your truck.'" The paper said Gerardo was trying to smuggle "munitions of war" across the border. "You can't start a revolution with bullets like that," he says. "You can't start a war with that. But that's what they got me for." Since he knew he was innocent, Serrano expected to get his truck back very soon. When that didn’t happen, he contacted the Institute for Justice for help."The Institute for Justice, or IJ, is a nonprofit law firm that represents individuals whose most basic rights are violated by the government," Dr. Dick Carpenter, director of strategic research, says.What Serrano experienced is a legal and commonly used law enforcement tactic known as civil forfeiture. "Most people are familiar with criminal forfeiture. When somebody commits a crime, they're charged and convicted, and then as a result they have to give up property related to that crime," Dr. Carpenter explains. "But in civil forfeiture, no person is charged with a crime. Instead the property is charged and convicted."Civil forfeiture is used by the government to seize property that may have been involved in a crime, even if the owner was not. That property could be anything from cash, to a boat, a house, or in Serrano's case, his truck.Civil forfeiture has been on the books since the country was founded in the 1700s. Originally it was used to fight piracy, but the federal government expanded the policy during the War on Drugs in the 1980s. Now there's concern it gives law enforcement reason not only to violate the rights of citizens but to police for profit, as well. Stefan Cassella is a former prosecutor. He's used civil forfeiture to help win convictions in court, but he agrees there is some reasoning behind the concern."Are police out there seizing cash from the back of a car, because they think they will ultimately be able to use that to supplement their budget? That's a perfectly legitimate concern," he says. "The response to that is congress enacted that procedure because they wanted to encourage state and federal cooperation. There's just not enough federal agents to go around to police every county in the United States."Casella spent 30 years with the Department of Justice. He believes civil forfeiture is necessary in most cases because even if the owner of the property hasn't committed a crime, that property could help lead law enforcement to someone who has."You need it to be able to go after property when the defendant who committed the crime is a fugitive, is fighting extradition, or cannot be identified," he says. "You still have to prove the crime, and you still have to prove the property was derived from the crime, but without the ability to prosecute the individual, you'd have no other alternative.”Cassella says the government uses civil forfeiture to recover property stolen in foreign countries, to recover assets used to finance terrorism, to recover artwork stolen overseas, and to recover fraud money."I did a case involving a woman who defrauded terminally ill cancer patients by charging them huge sums of money for worthless medical procedures and then fleeing to Mexico where she was a fugitive, leaving behind her property in Oklahoma. If you didn't have civil forfeiture, you could not recover that property and try to get it back to the victims."So what about cases like Serrano's? He wasn't charged or arrested in his run-in with border patrol, but it took nearly two years for him to get his truck back. That's because U.S. Border Patrol is exempt from the 90-day limit for law enforcement to push the civil forfeiture paperwork forward. Serrano says it's not clear why that is."The DEA does 14,000 seizures a year. The FBI does between 4,000 to 5,000 seizures a year. Customs does about 60,000 seizures a year," he says. "So, I don't know what the reasoning was, but for whatever reason, Congress exempted customs cases."After multiple calls and emails to U.S. Border Patrol, we have yet to hear back.Serrano says getting his truck wasn't as special of a moment as he had anticipated, because what's most important to him is that what happened in his case doesn't continue."You're violating people's rights," he says. "This kind of policy doesn't belong here."Serrano is part of a class-action lawsuit. The case is pending in the appellate court and is scheduled to be heard in the fall."I don't want this in my country. I know, I know that it's unconstitutional."*************************************************If you’d like to contact the journalist for this story, email Elizabeth Ruiz at elizabeth.ruiz@scripps.com 6097

  全国癫痫哪家医院好   

House Democrats in brief for impeachment trial say Trump 'abandoned his oath' and 'must be removed from office'.Earlier on Saturday, in first filing for impeachment trial, Trump defense team accuses Democrats of brazen attempt to overturn 2016 election. 265

  全国癫痫哪家医院好   

HAMBURG, N.Y. — An 11-year-old New York boy is being remembered by all who loved him as a kind, smart and healthy child. Luca Calanni of Hamburg passed away Saturday at Oishei Children’s Hospital after complications from the flu, his family says. The 263

  

Firefighters in California have been batting numerous blazes non-stop, trying to save millions of people and homes from the flames.The biggest fire, the Kincade Fire, has incinerated parts of the wine country in Sonoma County since last week. Farther south, multiples wildfires continue spreading near Los Angeles and 330

  

I was touched to learn of a young Florida school student’s heart for the University of Tennessee, and I LOVED his imagination behind designing his own shirt.  So many of us admire his love for UT and it’s awesome to see everyone step up to send him some UT gear!#EverywhereUT pic.twitter.com/83YqjzBxag— UT Interim President Randy Boyd (@UT_President) September 5, 2019 386

来源:资阳报

分享文章到
说说你的看法...
A-
A+
热门新闻

临沂医院真的可以治好癫痫吗

安徽哪治疗儿童羊羔疯病

山东省癫痫病医院治疗方法

山东省能治好羊羔疯病的医院

聊城哪个医院能治羊羔疯

菏泽哪个医院治羊羔疯病最专业

河北哪里治羊癫疯病比较好

河南癫痫病医院可靠吗

山东治疗癫痫需要多少费用

日照癫痫费用多么

滨州专科看羊癫疯的医院

江苏好的癫痫病医院

威海治疗羊癫疯病好的医院在哪里

江苏省好的癫痫医院治疗费用多少钱

山东省癫痫病的治疗最新方法

河南治疗羊羔疯病一般需费用

东营癫痫治疗效果好的医院

潍坊治癫痫去哪家

山东省怎样治羊角风效果好

滨州治癫痫病去那个医院

山东省治疗羊羔疯的正规医院

日照最优秀的医院羊羔疯专病是哪家

淄博有中医治疗羊羔疯病的吗

泰安治癫痫哪里效果好

淄博羊癫疯如何治疗

江苏癫痫医院怎么治疗