State prosecutors in Fulton County, Georgia may very soon ask a grand jury to indict former President Donald Trump — and others who allegedly assisted him — for their attempts to undermine the 2020 presidential election vote in that state. Those criminal charges could include violations of Georgia’s Racketeer Influenced Corruption Organizations (RICO) Act. But what is RICO, and how might Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis apply it to Trump’s vote-stealing efforts?
In 1970, following these Senate hearings and amid much consternation in the press and law enforcement, Congress gave the Justice Department a new and powerful tool.
In 1969, Mario Puzo published “The Godfather” — a fictionalized account of a violent New York-based organized crime family headed by patriarch Vito Corleone. But organized crime was not a fiction in this country. Senate hearings in the 1960s examined how ruthless and powerful crime families throughout the United States — like the make-believe Corleones — infiltrated unions, extorted businesses, peddled drugs, bribed public officials and committed violent acts to sustain and grow their criminal enterprises. Organized crime was a significant and pervasive threat.
In 1970, following these Senate hearings and amid much consternation in the press and law enforcement, Congress gave the Justice Department a new and powerful tool to combat organized crime: the RICO Act.
The drafters of the federal RICO statute understood that criminal syndicates used many different people to commit many different crimes. Those seemingly disparate criminal acts were in service of a single criminal enterprise and designed to buttress the strength and influence of the sponsoring crime family. Lawmakers realized it was harder to go after each crime and each criminal individually than to sweep all the crimes and all the criminals into one prosecutive RICO bucket. So how does RICO work?
A RICO prosecution — simplifying a bit — requires the government to prove that an individual, working for an “enterprise,” engaged in a “pattern of racketeering activity” by committing at least two underlying “predicate” acts. The federal RICO statute enumerates the qualifying predicate crimes — among them, murder, bribery, extortion and fraud. The list is long.








