‘Nicest judge in the world' Frank Caprio dies after cancer recurrence

Authored by nbcboston.com and submitted by error_ofsignificance
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Beloved Rhode Island Judge Frank Caprio has died after a cancer diagnosis, according to posts on his popular social media pages.

Relatives confirmed his death to NBC affiliate WJAR on Wednesday, a day after he'd asked followers from a hospital bed for their prayers.

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"Unfortunately I've had a setback, I'm back in the hospital now and I'm coming to you again asking you to remember me in your prayers once more," Caprio said, referring to a previous bout with pancreatic cancer.

Gov. Dan McKee ordered that Rhode Island flags fly at half-staff through the day of his interment, calling Caprio a "treasure" who connected with people as "a symbol of empathy on the bench, showing us what is possible when justice is tempered with humanity."

Caprio earned the nickname "the nicest judge in the world" for his years on the Emmy-nominated show "Caught in Providence" and his presence on social media, where he had millions of followers.

Judge Frank Caprio, who has shared his compassion in the courtroom for over 35 years, has been receiving supportive letters from around the world since his diagnosis with pancreatic cancer.

"He will be remembered not only as a respected judge, but as a devoted husband, father, grandfather, great grandfather and friend. His legacy lives on in the countless acts of kindness he inspired," the post announcing his death read. "In his honor, may we each strive to bring a little more compassion into the world — just as he did every day."

Decorus_Somes on August 20th, 2025 at 20:32 UTC »

Empathy where it was needed most, in our justice system. He will be dearly missed

deadflowers1958 on August 20th, 2025 at 20:28 UTC »

Goodbye Judge Caprio, you were a good man, you will be missed

Burggs_ on August 20th, 2025 at 20:26 UTC »

Granted he didn’t deal with anything super harsh besides traffic tickets, he was still very fair and willing to at least hear people out. A lot more than most working in the justice system.