Rico joined the FBI in 1951 at the age of 26 and was initially posted in
Chicago before being transferred to the Boston office after his father became terminally ill. While investigating his first major case, the
Great Brink's Robbery, Rico learned the value of recruiting
informants. Considering the Mafia a greater threat than all other organized crime groups in the United States combined, the Organized Crime Program of the FBI targeted
La Cosa Nostra as its highest national priority. Rico and his partner, Dennis Condon, became the most senior FBI agents investigating
organized crime in Boston. Salvati was released in 1997, and Limone in 2001. When interrogated during
U.S. House Judiciary Committee hearings in October 2003 about the four wrongful convictions, an enraged Rico responded, "What do you want, tears?" The two survivors and the estates of the deceased were awarded $101.7 million in damages by U.S. District Judge
Nancy Gertner in Boston on July 26, 2007.
Patriarca family murder trial Rico was in charge of cooperative witness
John "Red" Kelley, an
Irish American mobster and sometime associate of the
Patriarca crime family, during a murder trial of family boss
Raymond Patriarca and four members of the family,
Maurice Lerner, Robert Fairbrothers, John Rossi, and Rudolph Sciarra. The five were tried in 1970 for murder and
conspiracy to commit murder in the 1968 shotgun murders of Rudolph "Rudy" Marfeo and Anthony Melei. Kelley testified he had been
contracted by Lerner to kill Marfeo and Melei, whom Kelley and Lerner allegedly murdered. After the trial, Kelley went into the federal
witness protection program. Patriarca and his associates were convicted of conspiracy to commit murder and were sentenced to 10 years in prison. Lerner also was convicted of two counts of murder for which he was sentenced to two
life terms in addition to the ten years for conspiracy, all of the sentences to be served consecutively. The
jury was unable to reach a verdict for the other four defendants. Lerner's conviction subsequently was quashed by the
Rhode Island Supreme Court in 1988. It had been established that Kelley had
perjured himself at the trial, as had Rico, who had corroborated Kelley's testimony. The Court vacated his conviction and ordered a
new trial. ==Murder indictment and death==