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NewsNovember 3, 2007

LOS ANGELES -- Federal agents learned three weeks in advance that O.J. Simpson and a memorabilia dealer planned an operation to retrieve personal items Simpson said were stolen from him, according to FBI reports obtained Friday. Dealer Thomas Riccio said he reported to the FBI a collector who claimed to have belongings taken from Simpson...

By LINDA DEUTSCH and KEN RITTER ~ The Associated Press
O.J. Simpson was transferred Sept. 16 to the Clark County Detention Center in Las Vegas after being arrested in connection with an alleged armed robbery. (Jae C. Hong ~ Associated Press file)
O.J. Simpson was transferred Sept. 16 to the Clark County Detention Center in Las Vegas after being arrested in connection with an alleged armed robbery. (Jae C. Hong ~ Associated Press file)

LOS ANGELES -- Federal agents learned three weeks in advance that O.J. Simpson and a memorabilia dealer planned an operation to retrieve personal items Simpson said were stolen from him, according to FBI reports obtained Friday.

Dealer Thomas Riccio said he reported to the FBI a collector who claimed to have belongings taken from Simpson.

"The guy flat-out told me he had items stolen from O.J.'s house," Riccio said. "I have a legitimate business."

Riccio told FBI agents Aug. 21 that Simpson wanted to videotape the confrontation with the collector, who was peddling thousands of pieces of Simpson's memorabilia.

But Riccio was not clear how the operation would unfold. There was no mention in the report of any plans to use guns.

Riccio was advised to contact a lawyer before taking any action and was told that alerting the FBI would not absolve him of any potential crime, agent Linda Kline wrote of the meeting, which occurred in Los Angeles.

"I went along with O.J.'s plan," Riccio said Friday. "It was a self-organized sting operation. Except for the final result, with him bringing people who had guns. I knew nothing about that."

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Simpson, 60, and five other men were arrested after they allegedly stormed a Las Vegas hotel room with guns drawn Sept. 13 to seize items that were believed to include family photos and the suit Simpson wore the day he was acquitted of murdering his ex-wife and her friend.

Las Vegas police said the FBI did not alert them before the confrontation between Simpson and collectors Alfred Beardsley and Bruce Fromong.

"They contacted us afterward and provided us with the documentation," said Las Vegas police detective Andy Caldwell, the investigator handling the case.

Caldwell said he had no information about any FBI investigation into the incident.

FBI spokeswoman Laura Eimiller declined to comment on the interview.

Riccio said he called Los Angeles police and the FBI about Simpson's plan and "no one seemed to be concerned about it. They didn't seem all that interested."

Simpson is charged with an assortment of felonies including armed robbery and kidnapping. Three of his co-defendants have since pleaded guilty to lesser charges and said they would testify against Simpson. A preliminary hearing is scheduled next week in Las Vegas.

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