The Guardian · US news · Original story
G Robert Blakey obituary
US attorney and a key figure in the investigations into the assassinations of John F Kennedy and Martin Luther King
G Robert Blakey, who has died aged 90, was one of America’s leading legal scholars, and his speciality was organised crime. He is best remembered for writing the part of the 1970 Organized Crime Control Act aimed at “racketeer influenced criminal organisations”. Its provisions became popularly known as the Rico statutes, recalling the Edward G Robinson character Rico, an Italian mobster in the 1931 gangster film Little Caesar.
Blakey had previously drafted the wiretapping section of the 1968 Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act, and he became the primary resource for state and local governments when they moved to legislate in those areas. Blakey’s son John, an attorney and then district judge in Chicago, said his father’s determination came from a conversation outside the courtroom with a defendant he was once prosecuting, who told him: “You’re doing a great job, but don’t worry, you’re not going to win. The rules won’t let you.”
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Michael Carlson · Tue, May 26, 2026, 9:54 AM
US news | The Guardian

US attorney and a key figure in the investigations into the assassinations of John F Kennedy and Martin Luther King
G Robert Blakey, who has died aged 90, was one of America’s leading legal scholars, and his speciality was organised crime. He is best remembered for writing the part of the 1970 Organized Crime Control Act aimed at “racketeer influenced criminal organisations”. Its provisions became popularly known as the Rico statutes, recalling the Edward G Robinson character Rico, an Italian mobster in the 1931 gangster film Little Caesar.
Blakey had previously drafted the wiretapping section of the 1968 Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act, and he became the primary resource for state and local governments when they moved to legislate in those areas. Blakey’s son John, an attorney and then district judge in Chicago, said his father’s determination came from a conversation outside the courtroom with a defendant he was once prosecuting, who told him: “You’re doing a great job, but don’t worry, you’re not going to win. The rules won’t let you.”
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