Federal RICO cases are among the most aggressive prosecutions a person or business can face because prosecutors try to connect separate events, people, transactions, and communications into one alleged enterprise. A RICO charge can expand the case far beyond a single incident and can bring severe prison exposure, forfeiture allegations, restraining orders, and reputational damage.
Lebedin Kofman LLP defends clients in RICO investigations and prosecutions in New York federal courts, including matters involving alleged organized activity, fraud schemes, narcotics allegations, extortion, violence, money laundering, and conspiracy. The defense usually starts with narrowing the alleged enterprise, testing the pattern of racketeering theory, and challenging whether the government can prove knowing agreement beyond association.
What Is at Stake in This Federal Case
RICO changes the pressure of a case because prosecutors may use broad narratives, cooperating witnesses, financial records, and years of alleged conduct to argue that unrelated events are part of one criminal enterprise.
- Potential federal prison exposure and sentencing guideline enhancements.
- Forfeiture claims, asset restraints, and financial disruption.
- Use of historical conduct and alleged predicate acts to broaden the case.
- Risk that association, employment, friendship, or business ties will be framed as criminal participation.
- Parallel state, federal, regulatory, or civil consequences.
Federal Evidence and Procedure We Evaluate
A careful defense review often focuses on whether the government has overconnected people, communications, transactions, and events that do not actually prove a RICO enterprise or agreement.
- Indictments, complaints, affidavits, and search-warrant materials.
- Wiretap applications, intercepted calls, text messages, encrypted chats, and social-media evidence.
- Financial records, bank records, ledgers, business records, and alleged money flows.
- Cooperating witness statements, proffer notes, plea agreements, and benefits provided to witnesses.
- Predicate-act evidence, including alleged fraud, narcotics, extortion, violence, bribery, or obstruction allegations.
- Forfeiture allegations, restraining orders, and asset-tracing materials.
Defense Issues to Review Early
The strongest defense path depends on the indictment, the alleged predicate acts, and the proof tying the client to the claimed enterprise.
- Challenge whether the government can prove an enterprise distinct from ordinary associations or business activity.
- Dispute the alleged pattern of racketeering activity and whether predicate acts are legally and factually supported.
- Separate the client from broader conduct by co-defendants or alleged enterprise members.
- Attack unreliable cooperating witness testimony and motive-driven narratives.
- Challenge search warrants, wiretaps, digital searches, seizures, and identification evidence where appropriate.
- Develop sentencing and forfeiture strategy early if risk mitigation becomes necessary.
EDNY, SDNY, and New York Federal Defense Context
RICO cases in the EDNY and SDNY often involve long investigations, sealed warrants, wiretaps, multi-defendant indictments, and extensive discovery. A New York federal defense strategy must account for detention risk, protective orders, discovery volume, federal sentencing guidelines, and the different practices of the specific courthouse and judge.
Related Federal Defense Topics
- Federal Criminal Defense
- EDNY Federal Criminal Defense
- SDNY Federal Criminal Defense
- Federal Conspiracy Lawyer
- Federal Drug Trafficking Lawyer
- Federal Money Laundering Lawyer
- Federal Gun Trafficking and Firearms Lawyer
- Federal Cybercrime Lawyer
Frequently Asked Questions
What does the government have to prove in a federal RICO case?
The government generally must prove an enterprise, a pattern of racketeering activity, qualifying predicate acts, and the defendant’s knowing participation or agreement, depending on the exact RICO charge.
Can someone be charged with RICO without committing every alleged act?
Yes. RICO and RICO conspiracy charges can be built around alleged agreement or participation in an enterprise, which is why separating a client from broader allegations is often central to the defense.
Are RICO cases usually handled in federal court?
RICO can be charged federally and in some state contexts, but federal RICO prosecutions in New York are often handled in the EDNY or SDNY when prosecutors claim interstate activity, federal predicate offenses, or broader enterprise conduct.
Speak With a Federal Criminal Defense Lawyer
If you are under investigation, have received a subpoena, or are facing federal charges, early strategy matters. Lebedin Kofman LLP offers confidential consultations for federal criminal defense matters in New York City, Long Island, the Eastern District of New York, and the Southern District of New York.