In listening to The Big Picture podcast discussion of this movie it helped clarify part of the story for me that though I did pick up on initially, I didn't really grasp, I just really forgot. That was the sheriff's office in this small dying town actually did have a not entirely sinister reason for using civil forfeiture, which was to financially keep their office afloat. Granted when they do stuff like buy a margarita machine it doesn't hold as much water, but that act still isn't full on egregious in the grand scheme of things. I just wanted to point out this movie is smarter and has more thought behind it than just a good guy vs bad cops, which in less capable hands would have been the movie we got. Stuff like that makes me want to rewatch sooner rather than later. It also makes me real sad for Saulnier, it sounds like Boyega pretty much bailed because it was a tough shoot and that that made this movie take 5 years to get done as a result. Even if what we got is way better than the Boyega version, that's a lot of time to put a film on hold.