Title 18 › Part PART I— - CRIMES › Chapter CHAPTER 46— - FORFEITURE › § 983
Requires the government to tell people about seized property quickly. In most nonjudicial cases the government must mail written notice no later than 60 days after the seizure. No notice is needed if the government files a court forfeiture case before 60 days. If a criminal indictment alleges the property is forfeitable, the government must either send notice within 60 days or stop the nonjudicial case and preserve custody under the criminal rules. If state or local police hand property to the federal government, notice is due within 90 days of the original seizure. If a person’s identity is learned later, notice is due within 60 days of that determination. A headquarters supervisor can delay notice up to 30 days; a court can extend notice up to 60 days and then more 60-day periods if a written certification says notice would risk things like danger to people, flight, loss of evidence, witness intimidation, or harming an investigation. If the government fails to give required notice and no extension was allowed, it must return the property unless it is contraband or illegal to possess. Anyone claiming seized property can file a sworn claim that says what property and what interest they have. Deadlines: a personal notice letter must give at least 35 days to file a claim; if no letter was received, a claim can be filed within 30 days after final public notice. Agencies must provide simple claim forms and no bond is required. After a claim, the government must file a forfeiture complaint or return the property within 90 days, unless the court extends the time. In court forfeiture cases the government must prove by a preponderance of the evidence that the property is forfeitable and must show a substantial connection if the claim is the property was used in a crime. An “innocent owner” is not to lose property; the claimant must prove innocence by a preponderance of the evidence. Courts can split ownership, order compensation, or protect an innocent owner’s share. A person who did not get notice can move to set aside a forfeiture within 5 years if the government should have known about them and failed to give notice; the government then has limited time to start a new forfeiture. Claimants may ask the court to release seized property quickly if they have possession, ties to the community, and would suffer serious hardship, but certain items (like contraband, currency except business assets, evidence, items made for illegal use, or things likely to be used to commit crimes) cannot be returned. Claimants can challenge a forfeiture as an excessive fine; they must prove by a preponderance that it is grossly disproportional, and the court can reduce or cancel it. If a claimant’s interest is found frivolous, the court may fine them 10% of the property’s value (minimum $250, maximum $5,000). Courts may also issue orders to seize, preserve, or secure property while forfeiture is pending, sometimes even before a complaint is filed, for limited times.
Full Legal Text
Crimes and Criminal Procedure — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
18 U.S.C. § 983
Title 18 — Crimes and Criminal Procedure
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73