Frank T. Caprio

Politician

Birthday May 10, 1966

Birth Sign Taurus

Birthplace Providence, Rhode Island, U.S.

Age 57 years old

Nationality United States

#38649 Most Popular

1966

Frank T. Caprio (born May 10, 1966) is an American banker, lawyer, and politician from Rhode Island.

1984

He attended public schools in Narragansett, Rhode Island, and graduated from Bishop Hendricken High School in 1984.

1987

He played against Roger Clemens in a 1987 exhibition game and was scouted by Boston Red Sox legend Ted Williams.

1988

He earned a degree in economics from Harvard College in 1988.

While at Harvard, Caprio was captain of the Harvard baseball team.

He was an All-Eastern League outfielder in 1988, and an All-Ivy League defensive back on the championship Harvard football team in 1987.

He was elected a delegate from Rhode Island's Congressional District 2 and attended the 1988 Democratic National Convention in Atlanta.

1990

In 1990, while still attending law school, Caprio was elected to the Rhode Island House of Representatives for District 14 (Providence).

He served two terms as a state representative, traveling by train between classes in Boston each morning and legislative sessions in Providence each afternoon.

1991

Caprio earned a J.D. at Suffolk University Law School in 1991 and passed the bar exams in Rhode Island and Massachusetts.

As a lawyer, Caprio focused on corporate, tax, and finance issues.

He worked as an in-house counsel at Cookson Group plc, a publicly traded company on the London Stock Exchange.

Caprio began his political career while a senior at Harvard, when he was 21 years old.

2001

Following those two terms, Caprio spent the next 12 years serving in the Rhode Island Senate, where he chaired the Senate Finance Committee in 2001–2002.

In this position, Caprio saved an annual $5 million affordable housing program from being cut by the governor in 2001.

He then proposed and implemented a plan to expand the $5 million to $10 million through an affordable housing bond.

2002

He was removed from his chairmanship by Senate leadership in 2002 as a result of his outspoken advocacy of the Separation of Powers amendment.

2003

After some of the Senate leaders were removed from office in 2003, the amendment passed the legislature and became law after a statewide vote.

2004

In 2004, Caprio was named chair of the Senate Commerce, Housing, and Municipal Government Committee.

2006

He was the first political candidate in the United States to use on-demand television to reach voters and one of the first candidates to launch an Internet TV channel for use in a political campaign in 2006.

In 2006, he co-sponsored a bill to increase the annual $10 million bond to a $50 million affordable housing fund.

The housing fund was approved by voters in 2006.

Caprio also led the debate on phasing out Rhode Island's capital gains tax, which would allow Rhode Islanders to have the nation's lowest tax rate on their stock and real estate profits.

On November 7, 2006, Caprio, the endorsed candidate of the Democratic Party, was elected General Treasurer of Rhode Island, receiving 73% of the vote.

He won by a larger margin than any candidate for a contested statewide office on the Rhode Island ballot in 2006.

Caprio made Rhode Island history as the first candidate in the state to officially announce his candidacy via a multimedia broadcast that included television, Web, on-demand cable television, and radio.

This was done, he explained, because he wants his "vision for the treasurer's office" to be accessible to "as many Rhode Islanders as possible in as comfortable a format as possible."

Caprio was the first political candidate in the United States to use On-Demand Television in a campaign.

His television documentary, Caprio, the Biography, was available for free viewing throughout Rhode Island via Cox Communications's On-Demand program.

He also launched one of the nation's first campaign internet TV channels.

Both the website and his television ads garnered awards.

Months before the subprime mortgage crisis began to take a toll on banks, financial services companies and public pension funds, Caprio began to minimize the State's exposure to asset backed securities.

Steps included conducting a competitive bidding process that expanded the number of qualified investment banks underwriting the State's bond transactions, and minimizing the State's exposure to companies such as Bear Stearns.

2007

His twenty-year political career has included being elected as the 29th General Treasurer of Rhode Island from 2007 to 2011.

This tax change became law in 2007.

2010

Caprio was the Democratic nominee in the 2010 Rhode Island gubernatorial election, losing to Independent candidate Lincoln Chafee, who won with 36 percent of the vote.

2014

He ran for the Democratic nomination for General Treasurer in 2014 elections, but lost to first-time candidate Seth Magaziner.

He also is a Managing Director at Chatham Capital, a mezzanine finance firm with offices in Atlanta, Dallas and Providence.

Frank T. Caprio is the eldest child of Joyce and Judge Frank Caprio, and he is the brother of Rhode Island State Representative David Caprio.

His paternal grandfather had immigrated from Naples, Italy.