Redman, it is the policy of this forum to leave US politics at the door but since you brought it up you should at least get all the facts straight.
The government grant money goes to the organization not the individuals working for them and, while this may be clear evidence of sloppy hiring procedures and employee oversight, there is no evidence that the organization itself was involved in any sort of "criminal conspiracy".
Secondly, this story involved only a handful of employees who were set-up by a right-wing videographer (and his very hot girlfriend

) on hidden camera. That videographer was far from being a feminista gringa and yet has steadfastedly refused to release raw footage of the encounters to the police or anyone else. So what is any prosecutor, feminista or otherwise, really supposed to do. In at least one of the cases, the Acorn worker involved was also caught on tape making blatantly untrue claims (such as that she had killed her ex-husband). Are you also saying that she should be indicted for murder based just on what appears on a fragment of tape? As it happens, she claims (with I think some credibility) that she initially told the guy she could not advise him on that (though that part of the tape was edited out) and thought the cartoonishly clad would-be pimp was putting her on so she was just joking back with him, not talking seriously.
Thirdly, RICO cases are not so simple to prosecute. For example, is there any evidence that those workers were employed by the proposed criminal organization that was to have brought in those trafficking victims or that they were to share in the profits in any way? Is there really any greater and conclusive evidence that the people making the video were any less serious about what THEY were proposing than the workers who went along with their discussion? Was there any evidence of any action taken to move forward this activity other than the casual conversation of a few people one afternoon?
Finally, investigators ARE looking into whether there is anything that is chargeable in these cases that they could get a CONVICTION on. To suggest that politics has anything to do with why the individuals involved have not THUS FAR been indicted is simply right-wing paranoia. As it happens, the Acorn organization is already in the process of being stripped of much of its government support by members of BOTH sides of congress even though they, as an organization, were not directly involved.