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Report: FBI Alerted About Simpson
"Sting"
Natalie FinnSat Nov 3, 5:12 AM ET
Was Big Brother onto O.J. Simpson?
Los Angeles-based FBI agents were told three weeks beforehand that Simpson
and a sports memorabilia dealer were planning what Simpson termed a "sting
operation" to reclaim mementos he believed were pilfered from him,
according to bureau reports obtained by the Associated Press.
Las Vegas police said Friday that they were not aware of Simpson's plan,
but that the FBI shared its info with them after the Naked Gun star was
arrested.
Per reports dated Aug. 21 and Sept. 19, Thomas Riccio, the man who
arranged the Sept. 13 meeting in Las Vegas that has since resulted in
armed robbery, kidnapping and assault charges for Simpson and several
others, told the FBI on Aug. 21 that he knew of a collector—a "fanatic,"
he said—who had stolen Simpson memorabilia.
Riccio, who made audio recordings of both the hotel meeting and phone
calls leading up to the encounter and has not been charged in connection
with the alleged shakedown, reportedly told the feds that Simpson wanted
to videotape the confrontation.
"Riccio and Simpson want to do a television broadcast confronting
Beardsley regarding the items that were stolen," read one report. "Simpson
wanted Riccio's assistance in setting up the operation and helping obtain
interviews for Simpson through various media outlets after the fact."
Simpson, who obviously has never lost his taste for the spotlight, has
maintained that he went to meet with collectors Bruce Fromong and Alfred
Beardsley in September solely to take back what he thought was his.
His legal camp has also said that guns were not involved, although now
three of his alleged accomplices are willing to testify that Simpson asked
them to bring firearms along.
Mike McClinton, Charles Cashmore and Walter Alexander are all pleading
guilty to lesser charges and will turn state's evidence against Simpson.
Alexander, the second of the trio to flip, said in an interview with Vegas
detectives that his (probably former) golfing buddy said, 'We won't have
to use 'em, but…just to look tough, you know, so that these people know
that, you know, we're here for business,' " according to a police
transcript released last month.
For his part, Riccio has said that he was surprised by what purportedly
went down on Sept. 13—the guns, the screaming, etc. Per the FBI reports,
the info he supplied to the bureau focused solely on allegedly stolen
goods.
"The guy flat-out told me he had items stolen from O.J.'s house," Riccio
told the FBI, referring to Beardsley. "I have a legitimate business."
Riccio told the AP on Friday that neither Los Angeles police, whom he also
called, nor the Feds seemed "all that interested" in what he had to say at
the time.
The FBI has not responded to requests for comment on the interview.
According to the report, agent Laura Kline wrote that Riccio was advised
beforehand to hire an attorney because merely alerting the FBI to a
possible crime would not absolve him of culpability. |