Laborers excerpts from National Legal and Policy Center
Organized Labor Accountability Project
UNION CORRUPTION UPDATE
April 11, 2005 -- Vol. 8, Issue 8
LABORERS (LIUNA)
RI Mobster Pleads in Case where LIUNA Offices were Searched
A high-ranking mobster in the Patriarca crime family and laborers union member
has agreed to plead guilty to cocaine trafficking charges stemming from his
arrest in an FBI sting operation two months ago. Matthew L. Guglielmetti has
signed a plea agreement admitting that he conspired to distribute and possessed
with intent to distribute more than 5 kilograms of cocaine. The plea agreement
was filed March 30 in the U.S. District Court in Providence.
The arrest of Guglielmetti is part of a larger federal, state and local
investigation. When Guglielmetti was arrested on Jan. 20, the authorities raided
a concrete company in Cranston; a construction/real-estate firm in Warwick; and
a Providence office building that houses the New England regional office of the
Laborers Intl. Union of N. America. According to union spokesmen, the search was
of the New England Laborers' Labor-Management Cooperation Trust, an entity
related to, but separate from, the union's regional offices.
Guglielmetti has been one of Rhode Island's most prominent underworld figures.
In the late 1980s, he was one of several mobsters recorded in an infamous mob
induction ceremony in the basement of a house in Medford, Mass. In the early
1990s, Guglielmetti pleaded guilty to mob racketeering charges in Hartford,
Conn., and was sentenced to 5 years in federal prison in Sandstone, Minn.
Upon his release, Guglielmetti worked on construction projects in Rhode Island
and Massachusetts as a member of the Laborers union. All the time, he remained
under the watchful eye of law-enforcement officials. [Providence Journal,
3/31/05]
Fed. Judge Throws out Union Trustees of NJ Benefit Fund
A federal judge has removed the administrator and two trustees of a New Jersey
union's benefit funds that are now the focus of an ongoing federal corruption
probe. Citing serious questions about possible financial misconduct within
Local 734 of the Laborers' Intl. Union of N. America (LIUNA), U.S. District
Judge Dennis Cavanaugh in Newark said he would appoint substitute trustees to
oversee the local's pension and welfare funds, pending a new election.
Attorney David Grossman, who represents funds administrator Peter Rizzo, said on
April 7 that they are considering an appeal. He also urged the appointment of
Edwin H. Stier as the court-appointed administrator. Stier, a former federal
prosecutor, spent a decade as trustee cleaning up the pervasive mob influence
within Teamsters Local 560 in northern New Jersey. More recently, he served as
the internal ethics watchdog on the Intl. Brotherhood Of Teamsters, before
resigning in April 2004, charging that the IBT was interfering with his
investigations of Teamster corruption.
Local 734 has been under voluntary supervision by LIUNA since October 2002. But
its benefit funds had remained under local control. In January, however,
trustees for LIUNA went to federal court seeking the removal of Louis Calastro
and Salvatore Salerno -- the employer-selected trustees who controlled the funds
-- and Rizzo, the administrator. The action came after an independent hearing
officer, Peter F. Vaira -- the former U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of
Pennsylvania -- concluded that some of those involved with the union local and
its benefits funds had ties to organized crime.
Vaira also found that many jobs were being filled by relatives and business
associates of former executive board member August "Auggie" Vergalito, who left
the local after he pleaded guilty in 1997 to concealing payments he made from
the benefit funds. Vergalito's wife, a daughter, three sons-in-law, a former
son-in-law and two business associates were all on the payroll of the union
local or its funds. Trustees for the parent union cited more than $1 million in
salaries for what they said were essentially no-show jobs.
Earlier this year, the U.S. Attorney's office in Newark subpoenaed records from
the New Jersey local, court documents show. Grossman said at least 84 boxes of
documents have been delivered to prosecutors. [Newark Star-Ledger, 4/8/05]