Top Kayenta, AZ RICO Lawyers Near You
4800 North Scottsdale Rd, Suite 2200, Scottsdale, AZ 85251
717 D Street NW, Suite 300, Washington, DC 20004
500 Marquette Ave NW, Suite 1200, Albuquerque, NM 87102
6200 Airport Freeway, Haltom City, TX 76117
1801 California St, Suite 2700, Denver, CO 80202
1388 Sutter Street, Suite 805, San Francisco, CA 94109
2325 E Camelback Rd, Suite 700, Phoenix, AZ 85016
9 Robbins Street, Toms River, NJ 08753
4 Campus Dr, Suite 300, Parsippany, NJ 07054
271 N Stone Ave, Tucson, AZ 85701
121 South Eighth Street, Suite 893, Minneapolis, MN 55402
7500 College Blvd., 5th Floor, Overland Park, KS 66210
501 W Broadway, #240, San Diego, CA 92101
625 City Park Ave, Suite 200A, Columbus, OH 43206
7825 Washington Ave South, Suite #220, Bloomington, MN 55439
301 Route 17 N, Suite 211, Rutherford, NJ 07070
800 SE 3rd Ave, #410, Fort Lauderdale, FL 33316-1124
1109 W Main St, Suite 600, Boise, ID 83702
811 Ship Street, Suite 301, St. Joseph, MI 49085
AZ-202 Phoenix, Phoenix, AZ 85048
10820 Sunset Office Drive, Suite 123, St. Louis, MO 63127
14401 Sylvan Street, Suite 100, Van Nuys, CA 91401
1515 Lincoln Way, Auburn, CA 95603
1919 8th St, Boulder, CO 80302
1300 South University Drive, Suite 318, Fort Worth, TX 76107
Kayenta RICO Information
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Our Verification Process and Criteria
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Be in good standing with their bar associations and maintain a clean disciplinary record.Annual Review
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What Is a RICO Violation?
The Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations (RICO) Act was enacted in 1970 to address organized crime. Under RICO laws, anyone associated with the criminal group could be charged, including organization leaders who ordered or oversaw the criminal activity without directly taking part. RICO also provided for civil remedies and triple damages to recover unlawful gains.
How Do I Get a RICO Charge?
A RICO charge generally involves participation in a “criminal enterprise” with a “pattern of racketeering activity.” To get a RICO charge, the prosecutor must suspect you were involved in a criminal gang or group and the criminal activity involved more than a one-time event. Initially, RICO was used to go after organized crime and the Mafia. However, since the law went into effect, it has been used to indict a number of alleged criminal enterprises, including street gangs, motorcycle gangs, corporations, and police departments
The RICO Act also makes it a violation to conspire to commit racketeering offenses. Conspiracy to violate RICO charges means that someone can be charged and convicted even if the crime was never carried out. A conspiracy is an agreement between two or more people to commit a crime, with some overt act towards furthering the offense.
What Does the RICO Act Cover?
A “pattern of racketeering activity” requires at least two qualifying acts, within a period of ten years. The RICO Act has included several crimes that qualify as racketeering activity, including state and federal offenses. Acts of racketeering can include:
- Illegal gambling
- Murder
- Kidnapping
- Extortion
- Arson
- Robbery
- Bribery
- Dealing in obscene matter
- Drug offenses
- Counterfeiting
- Theft
- Embezzlement
- Fraud
- Witness tampering
- Human trafficking
- Money laundering
- Murder-for-hire
- Loan-sharking
- Terrorism
- Mail fraud
- Wire fraud
- Securities fraud
How Serious Is a RICO Charge?
A RICO charge is a serious criminal offense that carries the possibility of jail time, fines, and seizure of assets. RICO charges are federal felony charges that include imprisonment for up to 20 years or more. In addition to prison penalties, there are severe financial penalties, which include forfeiture of any interest, security, or property derived from racketeering activity.
There are also civil penalties under RICO. A violation of the RICO Act could include ordering the defendant to turn over financial or business interests, restrict future activities, and break up organizations. Civil remedies can also require restitution to any victims of the criminal offenses.
How Do You Beat a RICO Case?
When federal prosecutors charge someone with RICO offenses, the penalties can include years in federal prison and loss of your financial assets. However, you may have a strong legal case to beat RICO charges. Legal defenses may include challenging the prosecutor’s case to show there was no criminal enterprise and no pattern of criminal activity.
Even if you were involved in criminal activity, it has to be a pattern of racketeering. If there is only evidence of one crime, the defendant should not be convicted under RICO. Alternatively, committing a crime on your own without participation in a criminal organization may be another defense strategy.
Prosecutors may rely on the seriousness of RICO charges to get the defendant to plead guilty to other charges instead of facing the increased RICO penalties. However, before you plead guilty to criminal charges, you should consider talking to a criminal defense attorney for legal advice.