echoangle 4 days ago

> > The fire department gets called to an exploded meth lab containing a few dead bodies and a safe containing $200,000. What do?

> Find out whose money it was, and wrap it up in their probate. This should be nothing to do with the police.

The example was a meth lab though and the claim was "This should be nothing to do with the police.". Is operating a meth lab not a crime?

  • robertlagrant 4 days ago

    The context is "what to do with the $200000 we just found", not investigating crimes in general.

    • JumpCrisscross 3 days ago

      > context is "what to do with the $200000 we just found"

      If literally nobody--including the accused--claims it, it's unclaimed property [1].

      [1] https://www.usa.gov/unclaimed-money

      • Supermancho 3 days ago

        Each state and federal body has process for it. It's not uncommon to encounter unclaimed property (including cash), especially with poorly/inaccurately described bank accounts. eg https://www.fdic.gov/bank-failures/unclaimed-property-inform...

        Allowing specific state actors to actively claim these goods via civil forfeiture (and bypass these systems) has always been improper. Law enforcement is untrustworthy in many locales, so this is unsurprising.