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Don't think this can not happen to you or yours

Josey1Josey1 Member Posts: 9,598 ✭✭
edited October 2004 in General Discussion
Eminent Domain Abuses Common
Thor L. Halvorssen
Monday, Oct. 25, 2004
William Minnich and his nephew Bill were unaware that New York's Empire State Development Corporation had condemned their building. As owners of Minic Custom Woodwork in East Harlem, a thriving family business for more than 75 years, the Minnichs knew that there was nothing wrong with their building. Nevertheless, the state's development authority planned to transfer the Minnich family's property to a private developer who wanted the land for a Home Depot parking structure.

In Port Chester, N.Y., Bill Brody, a hardware store owner, received no notice when the local development authority condemned his business location. Ironically, Brody has spent significant sums of money purchasing and renovating four adjacent buildings. Again, there is no public crisis requiring Brody to surrender his land to the local authority; there is only greed. The Port Chester authorities want his land so they can give it to a businessman who plans to build a Stop & Shop.

Last month, after years of bad publicity and mounting legal challenges, Gov. George Pataki finally signed into law a bill requiring the state of New York, state agencies, municipalities and public authorities to inform property owners via certified letter when the state intends to seize their property.
The Fifth Amendment allows government to legally take private property for "public use" to build needed services like bridges and roads; the legal term for the government's prerogative over private property is "eminent domain." However, until Gov. Pataki signed last month's bill, a property owner had no way of knowing when his home or place of business had been condemned. Property owners also had no way of knowing that they have the right to fight the arbitrary confiscation of their property. Abuse of eminent domain is a violation of the Fifth Amendment.


Pataki vetoed a similar bill last year, even though it had passed the Legislature with unanimous bipartisan support. New York Attorney General Elliot Spitzer had opposed the law, claiming it would be too costly to use the U.S. mail to inform property owners of their rights. Apparently, Spitzer favors the practice of publishing cramped, hard-to-read advertisements in the legal notice sections of newspapers.

Spitzer's preferred methods are certainly more effective from a practical standpoint - it doesn't require a law degree to understand that one reason the authorities wish to keep property owners from contesting condemnation is because those owners could well prevail in court against abuse of eminent domain.

Laws are not retroactive, so the eminent domain cases being litigated are not affected by the new law. Brody and the Minnichs are fortunate to be championed by New York's Atlantic Legal Foundation and the Washington-based Institute for Justice.

These law firms provide free representation and have already succeeded in bringing about an exceptionally favorable settlement for the Minnich family. Though the Brody case is ongoing, the tireless work of Atlantic Legal and IJ ensured that the Legislature could no longer ignore the manifest injustice in the notification process.

Eminent domain abuse is a problem across the country, and IJ has an especially impressive track record doing battle against it. In New Jersey IJ tangled with Donald Trump when his company persuaded state authorities to condemn an elderly widow's Atlantic City home (Trump needed her land for a limousine parking lot for his casino customers).

It gets worse. Billionaire Trump's eminent domain apprentices tried to force the widow to hand over her land for a fraction of its market value. IJ stood up to Trump and protected the widow's rights. She continues to live in her home.

The Supreme Court announced three weeks ago that it will hear Kelo v. City of New London, Conn., a case being litigated by IJ in which a local authority is using eminent domain to take the homes of working-class folks to build a luxury hotel, health club and conference center. Their reason? They wish to increase the city's real estate tax base.

"People get really angry when their homes are taken so that someone richer can live there," says Dana Berliner, an IJ attorney. "Every house in the country would generate more tax revenue if it were turned into a bigger house or a Costco."

IJ's successful petition to the Supreme Court was supported by a friend-of-the-court brief filed by the Sacramento-based Pacific Legal Foundation. The brief argues that the unconstitutional expansion of the `public use' clause eminent domain has given unfair advantage to rich and powerful interests over poorer property owners.

Their brief was joined by two George Mason University economists - James Buchanan, a 1986 Nobel Prize winner, and Gordon Tullock of the Mercatus Center.

Atlantic Legal, Pacific Legal and the Institute for Justice are part of what is known as the freedom-based public interest law movement, an informal affiliation of some three dozen legal foundations that work diligently to uphold the principles of the U.S. Constitution. These independent organizations work across the legal arena to defend freedom of speech, school choice, workers' rights, religious liberty and economic rights. They work to ensure that no American is denied the fundamental liberties enshrined in our Bill of Rights.

A new book tells their story. Available this month, "Bringing Justice to the People" (Heritage Books, 2004) chronicles the remarkable 30-year history of the freedom-based public interest law movement (full disclosure: I contributed the chapter on freedom of speech). An enterprising TV producer will find in this book's rich descriptions of landmark cases a veritable blueprint for a "Law and Order"-type television - something on the order of "Freedom and the Law: Stories from the Champions of Individual Rights."

Susette Kelo, one of the New London homeowners, brings to life the importance of their work: "It is going to mean everything in the world if the U.S. Supreme Court saves my home. I'm so happy for myself and my elderly neighbors, who just want to stay in their homes."

Thor L. Halvorssen is First Amendment Scholar at the Commonwealth Foundation. He lives in New York.
http://newsmax.com/archives/articles/2004/10/25/11928.shtml


GEORGE WASHINGTON (First President)
"Firearms stand next in importance to the Constitution itself. They are the people's liberty teeth keystone... the rifle and the pistol are equally indispensable... more than 99% of them by their silence indicate that they are in safe and sane hands. The very atmosphere of firearms everywhere restrains evil interference. When firearms go, all goes, we need them every hour." (Address to 1st session of Congress)

Comments

  • pickenuppickenup Member Posts: 22,844 ✭✭✭✭
    edited November -1
    quote:Originally posted by Josey1
    Eminent Domain Abuses Common
    You can say that again.







    The gene pool needs chlorine.
  • HighballHighball Member Posts: 15,755
    edited November -1
    " Land of the Free "...How the founders weep.

    Condemn land for a road....in the old days.Now...condemn it for big business.
  • TheBrassManTheBrassMan Member Posts: 3,807 ✭✭✭
    edited November -1
    Here in Charlotte County, Florida; they are trying to take 1200 acers.
    If people are not willing to sell they are using Eminent Domain.
    They want the property to sell it to a developer to develope this grant
    project they want.
    They Call it Murdock Village.
    80% of the people here are against it but the county commission will not
    listen to the people. They think they know better.
    Three of the commission seats are up this election and I know that atleast one maybe all three will get new commissioners.
    I myself am running for one of the seats.
    If 3 of us who are against this project get elected we can put an end to it.


    Nowhere in the U.S. Constitution does it state: "Seperation of Church and State".

    "Those who beat their guns into plow shares; will plow for those who don't."

    62038332.jpgawcountdown.gif

    "Isaiah 5:20 ?Woe unto them that call evil good, and good evil; that put darkness for light, and light for darkness; that put bitter for sweet, and sweet for bitter!"
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