Although Congressmen write law, they are not above it. Former Arizona Congressman Richard Renzi learned this lesson when he was convicted on charges of conspiracy, honest-services fraud, extortion, money laundering, making false statements to insurance regulators, and racketeering. In U.S. v. Renzi, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeal was asked to reverse convictions for blatant insurance fraud.

Renzi misappropriated clients' insurance premiums to fund his congressional campaign, and lied to insurance regulators and clients to cover his tracks. The evidence established that Renzi used his business as an enterprise to conduct a pattern of racketeering activity by diverting clients' insurance premiums for his personal use, facilitating an extortionate land transfer, and laundering its proceeds.

Renzi owned and operated Renzi & Co. (R & C), an insurance agency specializing in coverage for non-profit organizations and crisis pregnancy centers. On Dec. 10, 2001, Renzi publicly announced his candidacy for a seat in the U.S. House of Representatives serving Arizona's First Congressional District. The very next day, Renzi began diverting cash from R & C to fund his congressional campaign. Between December 2001 and March 2002, Renzi transferred more than $400,000 from insurance premiums to his "Rick Renzi for Congress" account. To avoid campaign disclosure regulations, Renzi claimed the money as a personal loan to the Renzi campaign.

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