Robert A. Ricks (born October 14, 1944) — known as Bob Ricks and "Backdraft Bob" — is an American law enforcement agent and politician from Texas and Oklahoma. He has worked for the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the Governor of Oklahoma and in local law enforcement. He is best known as the FBI Assistant Special Agent in Charge during the 1993 Waco Siege or as FBI Special Agent in Charge during the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing investigation.
Ricks served 26 years in Federal law enforcement from 1969 to 1995, during which he rose from the position of Special Agent with the Federal Bureau of Investigation to Special Agent In Charge of the FBI in Oklahoma. He also served in various other positions of authority from Assistant Special Agent in Charge, Inspector, and Deputy Assistant Director.
Ricks served as FBI spokesman during the Waco siege, often speaking for the government at press conferences. On April 16, Ricks told the media:
We are going to get them. . .to bring them before the bar of justice for the murder of our agents. They're going to answer for their crimes. That's the bottom line to this whole thing, they're going to come out.[3]
Ricks told the media that operations were costing $2 million a day.[4] However, a later Senate Appropriations Committee hearing revealed actual costs as of April 22, 1993, were $6,792,000, an average of $130,000 a day.[5]
At the direction of newly appointed United States Attorney GeneralJanet Reno, FBI agents mounted a final assault on the Davidian church on April 19. By the end of the day, 76 Branch Davidians were dead, including women and children, and federal agents had seized control over the compound. Ricks' negligence in handling the Waco siege led to reforms in training procedures for FBI agents.[citation needed]
Six years after the Waco siege, Ricks was charged as a defendant in the 1999 civil suitAndrade et al. vs Chojnacki et al.[6]
Ricks served as chairman for the Oklahoma Federal Executive Board, which had oversight responsibilities for all Federal agencies in the State of Oklahoma. Ricks also served three years with the Drug Enforcement Administration where he was the Chief Counsel for DEA.
In 2003 when DemocratBrad Henry was elected to succeed Keating, Ricks agreed to stay on as Secretary in the Henry Administration. He remained in that position until October 2003 when he resigned as Secretary to become the Chief of Police for Edmond, Oklahoma. Henry appointed Kevin Ward, the deputy secretary under Ricks, to succeed him as Secretary.