Frank Caprio dies at 88 - TV’s ‘nicest judge’\” />

Frank Caprio dies at 88 - TV’s ‘nicest judge’\” />

Frank Caprio has died aged 88, his family confirmed, after living with pancreatic cancer.

The news was shared on his official Instagram, where he was remembered for his warmth, his humour and his unshakable belief in people. His son David thanked fans for the flood of messages and asked them to honour his father the way he would have wanted: ‘spread a little kindness.’

From a small Rhode Island courtroom to a global audience

Caprio spent decades hearing minor cases in Providence, Rhode Island. On paper it was everyday stuff – parking tickets, school-run speeders, missed signs. On screen it became something else. His show, Caught in Providence, turned simple hearings into moments of grace: a joke to break the tension, a question about a night shift, a fine trimmed when life had obviously got in the way. Those clips travelled everywhere. Between Facebook, YouTube, TikTok and Instagram, they racked up billions of views, and Caprio picked up the affectionate label ‘the nicest judge in the world.’

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Television took note too. Caught in Providence earned three Daytime Emmy nominations, and Caprio received two personal nods last year. The show’s distributors, Debmar-Mercury, praised his ‘compassion and common sense’ – a combination that sounds simple until you try it in a courtroom full of nerves. Even his lighter touches – inviting a child to sit beside him on the bench, unveiling a tongue-in-cheek ‘mini-judge’ plushie – felt like extensions of the man rather than a gimmick.

Inside Frank Caprio’s illness and loved ones

Caprio told followers in 2023 that he’d been diagnosed with pancreatic cancer and was ‘ready to fight as hard as I can.’ In one of his last updates he admitted to a treatment setback and asked for prayers. The replies read like a global thank-you card: people from Providence and far beyond saying a short video had made a hard day easier.

Away from the cameras he was a family man first. He is survived by Joyce, his wife of almost 60 years, their five children, seven grandchildren and two great-grandchildren. The family’s statement to his 3.4 million Instagram followers spoke of the ‘countless acts of kindness he inspired.’ That line rings true. Caprio’s great trick was to show that the law could be firm and humane; that listening first and explaining decisions clearly isn’t weakness, it’s good public service.

TV judges usually shout. Caprio didn’t. He let people breathe, told the truth gently, and made sure those on the wrong side of the desk felt seen. Sometimes the ticket stood; sometimes it didn’t. The point was the way he got there. It’s why his videos popped up in group chats from Belfast to Barcelona: five minutes of fairness with a smile.

The last word should be his family’s. If you want to remember Frank Caprio today, be kind to someone — waive a small slight, offer a hand, crack a joke that lightens the load. For the judge who made compassion his calling card, it’s the ruling he’d most want upheld.

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