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Why Ricci Topped Cop List
Sunday, September 1, 2002
 
PHOTO
Police have been unable to determine if Richard Ricci was involved in the abduction of 14-year-old Elizabeth Smart and, if he was, whether he had help. Members of the Smart family are "quite convinced there was somebody with Richard," said Elizabeth's aunt, Cynthia Smart Owens, during a family news conference Saturday. "There's so much evidence that someone else was involved."
(Danny La/The Salt Lake Tribune)
BY MICHAEL VIGH and KEVIN CANTERA
© 2002, THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE


    Though police have never publicly called Richard Albert Ricci anything but a "potential" suspect in the kidnapping of Elizabeth Smart, among the inner circle of investigators there remains scant doubt that the career criminal, who died Friday, somehow managed to snatch the girl without a trace.
    But the nagging question police have been unable to answer is: If Ricci did it, could he have done it alone, or did he work with at least one accomplice? And if he did it, why is there not any physical evidence linking him to the crime?
    Ricci insisted on his innocence until his death late Friday from a massive brain hemorrhage. And with him as their prime suspect, investigators have little to show -- at least publicly -- in their three-month probe into the 14-year-old's June 5 disappearance.
    With intriguing circumstantial evidence -- failed lie detector tests, a dubious alibi and a history of brazen nighttime home break-ins specifically targeting children's rooms -- police say Ricci fits almost seamlessly into a scenario of a desperate, drug-addled burglary attempt gone awry.
    The Salt Lake Tribune has pieced together the following scenario based on interviews with more than a dozen investigators on the case:
    Ricci, 48, whose criminal history dates back three decades, was a hard-core heroin addict with a costly habit. In need of easy cash, he targeted the Smart home, where he had worked odd jobs for the family a year or so earlier.
    After somehow entering the Federal Heights home -- whether through a cut window screen in the kitchen or elsewhere -- Ricci crept upstairs to the bedroom Elizabeth shared with the crime's only witness -- her then 9-year-old sister Mary Katherine.
    Ricci was known to enter kids' rooms during break-ins, based on his belief that items stolen from children would simply be written off by parents as lost. Having worked in the home nine months earlier, Ricci knew of small yet valuable items kept on the girls' dressers.
    But Ricci's simple plan was foiled when Elizabeth -- a light sleeper -- awoke to find the man she recognized lurking in the darkened room.
    The intruder threatened to shoot Elizabeth with his small black handgun if she didn't keep quiet, according to Mary Katherine, who apparently feigned sleep while trying her best to capture mental images of the intruder.
    She would later describe her sister's captor as a white male, about 5-foot-9, with dark hair on the backs of his hands and wearing an odd get up -- a white polo shirt, a tan jacket and a tan British-style cap. Two weeks later police would confiscate just such a hat from the trailer of Ricci's father-in-law, who lived next door to him. They also took a machete from the man's shed.
    Police initially reported that the kidnapper wore a white baseball cap, but altered that description about a week after Elizabeth disappeared based on more extensive interviews a specially trained investigator conducted with Mary Katherine.
   Elizabeth, wearing red satin pajamas and a pair of sneakers her captor ordered her to grab, was roughly led down the stairs and out of the house, the 9-year-old would later tell police.
    When Elizabeth fell and skinned her knee on the driveway, Mary Katherine heard her faint yelp of pain -- the last sound she would hear from her sister.
    But the problem with the above scenario is that no physical evidence has been found to back it up. All police have is Ricci's past behavior and suspicious alibi -- that he was home sleeping with his wife, who has acknowledged taking prescription narcotics that night.
    In fact, a minority of police investigators interviewed by The Tribune expressed skepticism over this scenario. They say that while Ricci's history suggests his possible involvement, they remain flummoxed by the complete absence of forensic evidence to tie him to the crime.
    Those doubters acknowledge the wealth of unanswered questions, but are unable to believe that Ricci was smart enough to have committed the crime without leaving a shred of forensic evidence.
    No hair fibers, fingerprints, blood or other tell-tale clues have been discovered connecting Ricci to the crime. And without finding Elizabeth -- alive or dead -- police seem unable to make a case against anybody.
    During the investigation, Ricci was questioned extensively and consistently maintained his innocence.
    Still, Salt Lake City Police Chief Rick Dinse has publicly focused on Ricci, questioning his refusal to tell police where his 1990 Jeep Cherokee, given to him last year by Elizabeth's father, Ed Smart, was during the week of the abduction.
    Ricci's West Valley City mechanic Neth Moul told police and a federal grand jury that Ricci surreptitiously took the vehicle from his lot May 30, returning the mud-spattered vehicle nine days later with an additional 1,000 miles on the odometer.
    Police had hoped to analyze mud samples from the Jeep, but the vehicle was washed clean before investigators had a chance to search it. Besides, investigators note that Elizabeth rode in the Jeep when it belonged to her father, and thus even if physical evidence had been found inside, it would not incriminate Ricci.
   "There are questions that [Ricci] has refused to answer," Dinse said. "He has been less than candid."
    Dinse acknowledged that Ricci's death could make it "impossible" to ever clear him: "I'm not saying I won't someday call Ricci our main suspect, but if I ever do, I will lay out the evidence against him."
    Ricci's mother-in-law, Roxie Morse, told The Tribune on Saturday that she believes police simply want to pin the abduction on her now deceased son-in-law.
    Police "wanted him to give them the answers they wanted to hear," Morse said, adding that investigators would be "stupid" if they stopped looking for the "real" kidnapper.
    "He didn't do it, he's innocent. They've got to keep looking for the person who really did this," she said.
    Elizabeth's family shares the prevailing police belief that Ricci was somehow involved in the teen's disappearance, but they believe somebody connected to Ricci is holding the girl -- still alive -- somewhere.
    Family members are "quite convinced there was somebody with Richard. . . . There's so much evidence that someone else was involved," said Cynthia Smart Owens, one of Elizabeth's aunts.
    Police continue to say that no one -- even close family members or acquaintances -- has been eliminated from scrutiny.
    mvigh@sltrib.com; kcantera@sltrib.com

11 posted on 09/01/2002 9:36:10 AM PDT by stlnative
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To: All
Ricci Blamed Long Criminal History on 'Heroin ... Prescription Narcotics'
Sunday, September 1, 2002
 

BY STEPHEN HUNT
THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE


    Like many career criminals, Richard Albert Ricci had a long-standing drug problem.
    Ricci, who died Friday at age 48, failed four times at parole during his lifetime, either for committing new crimes or violating release terms. And while in prison, he would repeatedly claim to have overcome his drug addiction, yet continued to use drugs, according to Utah Board of Pardons and Parole.
    "Ricci's a hard one to figure out,'' Region III Adult Probation & Parole spokesman Bradley Bassi said Wednesday, prior to Ricci's death from a brain hemorrhage. ''The ones who usually have problems have chips on their shoulders. Ricci does not."
    Ricci's first criminal conviction as an adult was for second-degree burglary in October 1972. Granted a parole in December 1974, Ricci was back to prison within two years after he pleaded guilty to attempted burglary and attempted vehicle burglary.
    According to parole records, Ricci absconded in 1978 when he failed to return from an Easter weekend home visit. Paroled again in March 1979, Ricci was back in prison a year later for associating with a known felon, as well as two new criminal allegations: a burglary arrest in Pima County, Ariz., and a Salt Lake County conviction for possession of burglary tools -- a pair of gloves, pliers and a screwdriver.
    Ricci won a new parole date of June 1981, but was returned to prison five months later for breaking into a Carbon County tavern. Ricci, who used a screwdriver to break into the jukebox, change machine and a safe, had filled a trash can with $250 in coins, according to police.
    Despite the new conviction, Ricci was granted a March 1984 parole date. But he once again absconded during a home furlough. While a fugitive, he robbed a fast-food restaurant and shot at a police officer during a drugstore burglary.
    Ricci told a parole hearing officer that drugs were the motivation behind the August 1983 break-in at the Sugar House pharmacy. When the Salt Lake City police officer shot at Ricci, he fired back with a sawed-off shotgun, inflicting minor wounds.
    Charged in that incident with a handful of felonies, Ricci pleaded guilty to first-degree felony counts of attempted murder and aggravated robbery and was sentenced to prison for up to life.
    "I was a wreck 10 years ago," Ricci said during a 1993 parole hearing. "I was in self-destruct mode." At a subsequent parole hearing, Ricci said his drug of choice was "heroin . . . or any kind of prescription narcotics."
    Based on good prison behavior, he was granted a June 1995 parole date. But he was soon involved in new criminal activity.
    Ricci was living with his fiancee and her three sons in Elsinore, Sevier County, and working for a landscaping company when he loaned his pickup truck to some friends, who used it to steal more than $2,500 in donated items from a local food bank.
    Ricci denied any involvement or foreknowledge of the Jan. 2, 1996, burglary, but admitted he accepted food he knew was stolen. Ricci pleaded guilty to third-degree felony theft and a burglary count was dismissed.
    Ricci was subsequently given a July 2000 parole date, which was bumped back two months because he again used drugs in prison. He was paroled Sept. 12, 2000.

12 posted on 09/01/2002 9:37:31 AM PDT by stlnative
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