State v. Stevens
Annotate this CaseAppellants were convicted of engaging in a pattern of corrupt activity under Ohio’s version of the federal Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO) for their involvement in the sale of drugs. The total amount of money involved in the sales attributed to each appellant was $460 and $250 respectively. Appellants appealed, arguing that the State failed to offer evidence demonstrating that either of them was involved in drug sales that totaled $500 or more, although the enterprise they were involved in profited significantly, and therefore, the $500 threshold set forth in Ohio’s RICO statutes had not been satisfied as to either of them individually. The Supreme Court overturned Appellants’ first-degree felony convictions under Ohio’s RICO statutes, holding that in order for a defendant to obtain a conviction for engaging in a patter of corrupt activity, Ohio’s RICO statutes must be construed so that the stated threshold amount applies to each individual and not to the enterprise as a whole. Remanded.
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