LIUNA, ORGANIZED CRIME, AND THE
CLINTON ADMINISTRATION
A Government Reform Project Study
By Kenneth R. Weinstein
Director, Government Reform Project
and August Stofferahn, Research Assistant
The Heritage Foundation
Backgrounder Update No. 281
October 20, 1996
(Updating Government Integrity Project Report
No. 10, "Organized Crime,Organized Labor, and Corruption
of the Federal Grants Process," July 31, 1996.)
In a February 1995 consent decree, the Laborers'International
Union of North America (LIUNA) admitted that several of its locals
and affiliates operated under the influence of organized crime.
Over the past two decades, at least 80 officials of LIUNA and
its affiliates have been convicted of various organized crime-related
activities,including bribery, embezzlement, interstate transportation
of stolen merchandise, and attempted murder. Notwithstanding this
record, the Justice Department under the Clinton Administration
has allowed LIUNA's leadership to remain largely in place.
In hearings this summer, Congress raised
questions about whether the Justice Department's treatment of
LIUNA was influenced by the union's political ties to the Clinton
Administration.
1 After the Justice Department investigation
was disclosed publicly, LIUNA significantly increased its political
activity. Despite its relatively modest size, it became the largest
union contributor of "soft money" to the Democratic
Party, as well as the fourth-largest political action committee
(PAC) contributor among all of the nation's labor unions.
During the first two full fiscal years under
the Clinton Administration, LIUNA received nearly $30 million
in federal grants. Many of these grants were awarded to LIUNA's
education and training programs, a special focus of criminal investigations
of the union. Congress should direct the General Accounting Office
to investigate whether taxpayer funds were abused and whether
government grantmakers were ignorant of, or simply chose to ignore,
evidence of LIUNA's abuse of education and training funds.
LIUNA's Record of Partisan Politics: Around the time the Justice Department investigation of LIUNA became public knowledge in October 1993, the union dramatically increased its involvement in partisan politics. During the first ten months of 1993, it gave $50,600 in "soft money" donations to the Democratic National Committee (DNC). Between January and
September 1996, it gave $460,000 to the DNC,
making it the top soft money donor among labor unions. Although
LIUNA has only one-third the membership of the National Education
Association, its soft-money donations exceed the NEA's by 50 percent.
2 LIUNA's political action committee,
the Laborers' Political League (LPL), has grown in influence over
the same time period. The 16th-largest labor PAC in 1993-1994,
the LPL has become the 4th-biggest in the 1995-1996 election cycle.
Since 1993, it has donated over $2.1 million to Democratic Party
congressional candidates.
LIUNA General President Arthur Coia also
has become a leading fund-raiser for the Democratic Party. He
served as co-host for a 1994 fund-raiser that brought more than
$3.5 million into DNC coffers and as Vice Chairman of a May 1996
event that raised more than $12 million for the DNC. These efforts
and others earned Coia the privilege of frequent access to the
White House. He also has traveled with the President on numerous
occasions, even accompanying him to greet the Pope in Denver.
Cash-Back Bonus:
Nearly $30 Million in Federal Grants in FY 1994 and 1995
During 1994 and 1995, the first two full
fiscal years of the Clinton Administration,LIUNA's largesse to
the Democratic Party was reciprocated more than tenfold in the
form of nearly $30 million in grants from the federal government.
Such federal subsidies are especially significant to the financially
strapped union, which last year ran an operating deficit of $11.8
million.
3 As detailed in GIP Report No. 10, four federal agencies -- the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), and Department of Labor (DOL)
-- awarded 38 grants totaling $11,376,000
to LIUNA and its affiliates in FY 1994 alone. Moreover, in April
1995, just two months after it signed the consent decree publicly
acknowledging the influence of organized crime in its ranks, the
union received a $3.5 million training and education grant from
HUD.
Now The Heritage Foundation has obtained copies of numerous FY 1995 grants to LIUNA and its affiliates. During FY 1995, in addition to the $3.5 million HUD grant, LIUNA and its affiliates benefited from 12 grants totaling $14,832,000 from six federal agencies: DOL, EPA, HUD, HHS, the Department of Education, and the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service
(see Appendix). The majority of these grants
were awarded after the February 1995 LIUNA-Department of Justice
consent decree had been signed.
Most significant among the FY 1995 grants was $9.3 million from the National Institutes of Health's Superfund Worker
Training Program, awarded on September 15,
1995. This grant, nearly six times the program's average grant
of $1.59 million, amounted to more than one-third of the Superfund
Worker Training Program's entire $30.3 million 1995 grant budget.
LIUNA's Record of Training Fund Abuses
The bulk of these 1994 and 1995 federal grants
to LIUNA funded education and training programs, where much of
the
criminal activity in the union took place. The November 1994 complaint against LIUNA, drafted by the Department of Justice
but never filed in court, alleged that "in
or about 1986 to on or about July 31, 1994,"LIUNA officials
-- including Coia -- sought to "defraud training and education
funds of various upstate locals" in New York, employing "actual
and threatened force" to "induce the locals to surrender
control of these funds."
In addition, the Department of Labor's Inspector
General recently hailed the conviction of one LIUNA official for
conspiracy to steal union training funds.4 But despite this conviction
and other government allegations, federal grants continue to flow
to a group that admittedly has been infiltrated by organized crime.
GAO Should Investigate LIUNA's Federal
Grants
Congress should call upon its investigative
arm, the General Accounting Office, to examine the process by
which federal officials awarded such major grants to LIUNA. The
GAO investigation should attempt to determine whether any of the
training and education grants awarded to LIUNA and its affiliates
were connected in any way to the allegations, prosecutions, or
convictions against LIUNA officials.
LIUNA officials have been both charged with and convicted of abusing training and education funds. The federal government
provided tens of millions of dollars in training
and education grants to the union.Even minimal concern about taxpayer
funds would more than justify an inquiry as to whether known abuses
involved the use of federal grants.
The GAO also should try to ascertain whether
federal grantmakers adequately monitored the receipt and use of
taxpayer funds by union officials. Relevant grantmakers at agencies
that have supported LIUNA should be asked about their knowledge
of allegations of criminal infiltration of LIUNA and their agencies'
efforts to prevent such wrongdoing in the future. Moreover, the
GAO should begin an immediate review of FY 1996 and FY 1997 grants
to LIUNA.
The House Judiciary Committee has yet to
conclude its investigation of whether LIUNA's political ties allowed
it to escape harsh legal sanction from the Justice Department.
It seems clear, however, that LIUNA General President Arthur Coia
used his ties to the White House to seek federal grant dollars.
According to an article in the May 1996 Washington
Monthly, Coia personally lobbied the President for grant money
at a fall 1994 Oval Office meeting, and the President informed
Coia that White House Deputy Chief of Staff Harold Ickes would
handle such matters.
5 (Before joining the Clinton Administration,
Ickes practiced labor law; LIUNA was one of his clients.
6) Normally, federal grants are issued directly
by agencies without White House intervention. Although White House
intervention in the grants process may not be illegal, it is unusual
enough to merit further GAO examination.
In addition to examining the specifics of the LIUNA case, the GAO should recommend guidelines to help federal agencies
determine how to respond properly to grant
requests from organizations operating under substantial allegations
of criminal wrongdoing.
APPENDIX
FY 1995 Federal Grants to Laborers' International
Union of North America and Affiliates Laborers-AGC Education/Training
$2,284,901
Department of Health and Human Services,
National Institutes of Health, October 1,1994
Laborers Home Development
$402,000
Department of Housing and Urban Development,
Public and Indian Housing, October 1, 1994
Laborers Home Development
$44,945
Department of Housing and Urban Development,
Public and Indian Housing, October 1, 1994
Laborers International
$748,536
Department of Housing and Urban Development,
Public and Indian Housing, October 1, 1994
Laborers-AGC Education and Training Fund
$190,240
Department of Education, Office of Vocational
and Adult Education, December 6, 1994
Laborers-AGC Education and Training Fund
$400,000
Environmental Protection Agency, April 25,
1995
Laborers -- Laborers' Institute for Training
and Education
$3,500,000
Department of Housing and Urban Development,
Public and Indian Housing, April 26, 1995
Laborers Institute of Training and Education
$750,000
Department of Labor, Public and Indian Housing,
June 26, 1995
Laborers-AGC Education/Training
$9,344,500
Department of Health and Human Services,
National Institutes of Health, September 15, 1995
Laborers-AGC Education/Training
$350,000
Department of Health and Human Services,
Centers for Disease Control, September 15, 1995
Laborers National Health and Safety Fund
$149,254
Department of Health and Human Services,
Centers for Disease Control, September 15, 1995
New England Laborers Health and Safety Fund
$99,975
Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service,
September 28,1995
Laborers-AGC Education and Training Fund
$68,100
Department of Labor, Occupational Safety
and Health Administration, September 30, 1995
FISCAL YEAR 1995 TOTAL
$18,332,451
Endnotes:
1.House Committee on the Judiciary, Subcommittee on Crime, "Hearing on Clinton Administration Efforts Against the
Influence of Organized Crime in LIUNA,"
July 24-25, 1996.
2.Editorial, The Washington Times, September
11, 1996, p.A16.
3.Cheryl Bolen and David Nather, "Race
for Presidency of LIUNA Narrows to Coia, Bruno Caruso," Daily
Labor Report, September 26, 1996, p. A9.
4.Office of the Inspector General, U.S. Department
of Labor, Semiannual Report to Congress, October 1, 1995, to March
31, 1996.
5.John E. Mulligan and Dean Starkman, "An
F.O.B. and the Mob," Washington Monthly, May 1996, p. 13.
6.Editorial, The Washington Times, August 28, 1996.