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| The Felon Behind O.J.'s Bust - |
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gwen
Posted:
Thu Sep 20, 2007 8:44 am |
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The Felon Behind O.J.'s Bust
Meet Thomas Riccio: Arsonist, prison escapee, stolen goods dealer
SEPTEMBER 18--The California man who helped orchestrate O.J. Simpson's memorabilia recovery mission (and then sold an audiotape of the raid to a tabloid web site) is an ex-con whose rap sheet includes at least four separate felony convictions, including arson, prison escape, and stolen property charges, The Smoking Gun has learned.
Thomas Riccio, 44, has emerged as a key player in the Simpson case and, presumably, would be a witness at any future criminal trial. Riccio, a sports collectibles dealer, set up Simpson's visit to a Las Vegas hotel room where the former athlete and his associates allegedly seized memorabilia at gunpoint from two businessman. Riccio recorded part of the confrontation at the Palace Station hotel and then sold the tape to TMZ.com, never bothering to tell police about his surreptitious taping.
Court records show that Riccio--who has spent a combined total of eight years in prison--was first convicted of a felony in 1984, when he was nailed in New Jersey on a federal charge of conspiracy to receive stolen goods. After bouncing around the prison system for several months, Riccio landed at the federal lockup in Danbury, Connecticut in October 1984. Less than three months later, Riccio escaped from Danbury, where he was apparently held in a minimum security facility.
Riccio spent about five months on the lam before being apprehended in California. He was subsequently convicted on a separate escape charge, which resulted in additional time in the federal system. Riccio left a Texas prison in August 1988 for a halfway house, where he spent a month before his release. In total, Riccio spent nearly four-and-a-half years in federal custody on the stolen property and escape charges.
Riccio was then arrested in early-1994 on arson and possession of flammable materials charges. He later pleaded to those felony counts in California's Orange County Superior Court and was sentenced to two years in state prison.
That term, as it turned out, was served concurrently with yet another Riccio felony conviction, this one stemming from the theft of nearly $500,000 worth of rare gold and silver coins.
In that Los Angeles Superior Court case, Riccio was nabbed for trying to fence coins that were boosted from a numismatic dealer show at a Long Beach Convention Center show. According to court records, Riccio was arrested when a vigilant Glendale dealer called cops after he recognized a rare 1870 Cuban copper coin as having been stolen from Miami dealer Arthur Smith. When cops later confronted him in the businessman's store, Riccio exclaimed, "You can't prove they are stolen."
A subsequent search of two safes at Riccio's home turned up 1100 more coins swiped from Smith, along with other items belonging to the veteran numismatist. Riccio claimed that he had recently purchased the valuable coins for $4500 from a white male who came into his baseball card business. Riccio admitted to police that he sold some of Smith's coins in Dallas, Omaha, and Oklahoma City. Additionally, before the Glendale dealer became suspicious and called the cops, Riccio had, on two occasions, sold the businessman some of Smith's coins. At Riccio's request, the dealer paid him in Krugerands.
A Long Beach jury convicted Riccio of receiving stolen property, a felony for which he was sentenced to three years in prison. He was also ordered to pay Smith $165,000 in restitution. As a result of the two separate state convictions, Riccio spent 37 months in the California state prison system.
He was released in October 1997, but was incarcerated again in mid-1999 on a probation violation (the details of which were not available at press time). After four months in custody, Riccio was released.
http://www.thesmokinggun.com/archive/years/2007/0918072riccio1.html
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AKA Gagal_05
Joined: 24 Feb 2007
Posts: 15262
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pausebreak
Posted:
Thu Sep 20, 2007 8:49 am |
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Reached on his cellphone shortly after his appearance on the Larry King program, Riccio acknowledged his past problems. "Basically, it's all true," he said. "I did it. I've been in trouble in the past. What do you want me to say?"
In fact, he did quibble with one of the convictions.
He said the arson case stemmed from a fire at a house he owned in Buena Park. He admits to setting the fire but says it did not amount to arson. He said that vandals had severely damaged the property but that his insurance agent was refusing to pay what he considered a fair settlement unless the problem was worse.
"So I made it worse," he said. "They call that arson." (ya think? LOL)
Riccio said that he had been crime-free for more than a decade and that he was not concerned with how his past crimes might affect his credibility in the unfolding Simpson robbery case.
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-riccio19sep19,0,4206177.story?coll=la-home-center
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Soopa Soopa Bitch !!
Joined: 24 Mar 2006
Posts: 5550
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southern one
Posted:
Thu Sep 20, 2007 9:12 am |
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The whole lot of them are all low lifes.
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Joined: 14 Apr 2007
Posts: 375
Location: southeast Alabama
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gwen
Posted:
Thu Sep 20, 2007 9:31 am |
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| southern one wrote: | | The whole lot of them are all low lifes. |
Definitely.
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AKA Gagal_05
Joined: 24 Feb 2007
Posts: 15262
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babybee
Posted:
Thu Sep 20, 2007 8:46 pm |
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I'd love to see the whole crew have to go before Judge Judy. She'd be screaming at the whole lot of them.
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Joined: 24 Mar 2006
Posts: 1487
Location: State of Confusion
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pausebreak
Posted:
Thu Sep 20, 2007 9:41 pm |
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Sometime within the past year or so, the phone rang at Victor Moreno's office in Las Vegas. Moreno, president of American Memorabilia, heard the man on the other end of the line describe some items of O.J. Simpson's that he was hoping to sell.
"I remember him telling me about a suit," Moreno said Monday, "but even that's not gonna go for much. I told him, 'Bruce, O.J.'s stuff is not gonna sell. It's a dead deal. It's not moving. Nobody likes him.'"
Thus discouraged, Bruce Fromong went on to seek other avenues to move the Simpson items he said he had, Moreno says. The auction-house executive forgot about the entire conversation until this past weekend -- when Fromong surfaced as one of the two collectible dealers on hand as Simpson and a band of cocktail-party cohorts, some with guns, allegedly stormed a Vegas hotel room in an attempt to recover memorabilia items that Simpson claims were stolen from him years ago.
AP Photo/Jae C. Hong
O.J. Simpson went to the Clark County Detention Center in Las Vegas on Sunday ... without his memorabilia.
One of the items Simpson thought he might get back? The suit he wore in court on the day in 1995 that he was acquitted of the murders of Nicole Brown Simpson and Ronald Goldman. It is the same suit that Bruce Fromong had already tried, unsuccessfully, to sell through any number of channels, including listing it on eBay.
The episode at the Palace Station hotel in Vegas has led to Simpson and two other men being charged, left others actively sought by law enforcement authorities, and brought before the public eye the loosely confederated world of sports and celebrity memorabilia collectors and hustlers.
It is a place populated by -- how to put it tactfully? -- characters.
"Tom Riccio -- he's a character," says Moreno, referring to auctioneer Thomas Riccio, identified in police accounts as the man who first alerted Simpson that someone was attempting to sell some O.J. memorabilia that Riccio considered to be of questionable origin.
Riccio is the same man who sold Anna Nicole Smith's diaries for $512,500 on eBay about six weeks after her death earlier this year. He also was ready to peddle video of Smith's 1994 breast-enhancement surgery, provided to him by the doctor who performed the procedure, before being blocked by preliminary injunction last month. He is the man who booked Simpson two years ago to sign memorabilia at the NecroComicon show in Los Angeles, a move that took a weird turn when the show's other biggest names turned out to be mostly the stars of horror and slasher films.
Simpson Audio
TMZ.com obtained an audiotape where a man believed to be O.J. Simpson is heard shouting questions while other men yell orders to the people in the room. Hear it
"He's something," Moreno says of Riccio. "I think his whole deal was, he was trying to help O.J. get his stuff back. But I know Riccio quite well. He's not gonna do nothin' for nobody unless he gets something out of it. Maybe he was talking to O.J. about selling it for him, I don't know."
Whatever the motive, a profit for Simpson almost certainly won't be among the outcomes. In addition to facing six charges, including two for assault with a deadly weapon, Simpson also stands a fair chance of never controlling the items he says he went to the hotel room to recover.
David J. Cook, an attorney for Fred Goldman, told the Los Angeles Times he will seek a court order this week to prevent the release of the items until it's made clear who actually has ownership rights -- and to stake a claim for the Goldman estate as part of Simpson's wrongful-death conviction in the case. Among the other murky details of the current Simpson case is the notion that even the police aren't yet certain what belongs to whom, and among the possible owners are collectors Alfred Beardsley and Fromong, the two men allegedly in the room when Simpson and several other men entered.
"Either Mr. Beardsley is going to walk out with the stuff or it's going to be ours," Cook told the Times. "This property will never touch Mr. Simpson's hands ever again."
More from ABCNews.com
ABCNews.com has the official complaint against O.J. Simpson. Documents
Follow ABC's "The Trials and Tribulations of O.J. Simpson." Coverage
That's not the same as saying that Simpson-related items won't sell. A cursory glance at sports memorabilia sites reveals a plethora of O.J.-signed stuff, and not all of it comes cheap. An autographed throwback Buffalo Bills jersey is offered at $294 at one site, while another lists a signed Bills helmet from the Simpson era at $540 (Simpson's inscription: "Miami has the Oranges, But Buffalo got the Juice").
Despite waving off Fromong on the Simpson articles last year, Moreno says he took consignment from Fromong sometime in the past on a football used by Simpson in a game -- which, from Moreno's perspective, is the only kind of O.J. gear that might still hold value.
"It needs to be mostly game-used stuff, jerseys or balls or whatever," Moreno says. "Outside of the Heisman Trophy -- and those will always go for $150,000, $200,000, because people really do want to collect them -- about the only thing that's worth it from O.J. is probably his rings.
"The other stuff? It just won't go. It's like I told Bruce: I kind of know this business, this auction business. The O.J. stuff is not moving. And that's not gonna change."
http://sports.espn.go.com/nfl/columns/story?columnist=kreidler_mark&id=3024880
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Soopa Soopa Bitch !!
Joined: 24 Mar 2006
Posts: 5550
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Ber
Posted:
Fri Sep 21, 2007 10:44 am |
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when will oj realize he's just not that bright. Or is that the problem....he's too stupid to figure it out. Or maybe he's stupid like a fox...he knows exactly how to get away with stuff.
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Joined: 06 Apr 2006
Posts: 1766
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