I am not an attorney. I never worked in any legal fields. So what I have written here may not be 100% accurate. In my previous life, my professional background was in accounting. I was a licensed Certified Public Accountant (CPA).
Because my attackers came from the ranks of RICO organizations, their employees, their members, or their contractors, I have learned to become very familiar with the RICO Statute.
Here are examples that illustrate how to determine if a criminal activity violates the RICO Statute in the most simplistic way possible.
According to the RICO Statute, criminals can be prosecuted under the following provisions:
Remember the last part of the sentence, "and any union or group of individuals associated even though they are not legal entities"? Two individuals who conspired to commit RICO crimes are all that need to be prosecuted.
While the two crimes may not have the same types of crimes, they fit a pattern of racketeering activity by the same enterprise (at least two or more of the same individuals).
There are a wide range of crimes that can be covered by RICO statutes when at least two of the same individuals (an enterprise) commit them, including:
- Criminal medical activities, including forced organ and tissue harvesting, premeditated injuries, and murders
- Vehicular mobbing, auto insurance frauds, injuries, and vehicular homicide
- Criminal activities in disguise of legitimate law enforcement-first responder-governmental activities to harass, entrap, injure, and murder their targeted individuals for tangible or intangible profit or incentives
- Human trafficking
- Prostitution
- Drug trafficking
- Extortions of criminal acts from debtors in lieu of paying off debts (rents, mortgages, car payments, illegal debts, gambling debts, usury debts)
- Intelligence-led predictive policing (ILPP): applying criminal political, governmental, corporate, and NGO influences by blacklisting innocent targeted individuals, victims of their hate crimes, and targeted retaliations for around-the-clock harassment, eavesdropping, institutional stalking, and fraudulent criminal entrapment attempts to completely destroy their targeted individuals' lives.
The RICO Statute's most crucial feature is that, in contrast to other statutes, it was written to allow for the prosecution of RICOs' captains and bosses even when they are not physically responsible for the crimes they are accused of committing.
This holds true for sponsors of RICO crimes, individuals in positions of power such as corporate CEOs and SVPs, branch managers, political party leaders at various levels, station captains, team leaders, ethnic-community-profession-based NGO leaders, and religious cult leaders, who also have the power to determine who gets hired, promoted, and paid in order to carry out crimes.