| No. 189 Thursday, September 30, 1999 |
Page AA-1 |
| ISSN 1522-5968 | |
|
Leading the
News | |
| Laborers LIUNA's President Arthur Coia Poised to Resign Under Plea Agreement | |
A government source familiar with the agreement told BNA Sept. 29 Coia is expected to announce his resignation from LIUNA by Oct. 15. Coia's resignation would be followed a few weeks later by a guilty plea on a single felony count pertaining to his purchase of an expensive sports car from a dealer who was also a vendor to Coia's union, the source said. The plea agreement was negotiated by Department of Justice prosecutors with the Office of the U.S. Attorney for the District of Rhode Island.
Under the plea deal, Coia would likely avoid a prison sentence, the source said. He would, however, be barred from any future interaction with the union he and his father, Arthur E. Coia, served for so many years.
Other sources in Washington, D.C., confirmed the basic outlines of the plea agreement, but declined to comment further.
A LIUNA official had no comment on the report, other than to say, "From time to time these rumors come up. There is no change in President Coia's status or plans."
A spokesman for the Justice Department in Washington, D.C., had no comment on the matter.
The agreement would in many respects allow the government to achieve objectives that eluded LIUNA's own internal disciplinary process earlier this year. In a decision dated March 8, LIUNA's independent hearing officer Peter F. Vaira cleared Coia of nearly all charges involving violations of the union's ethical practices code (46 DLR AA-1, E-1, 3/10/99. Many of the charges involved allegations that Coia closely associated with organized crime figures and reflected the Department of Justice's long-held contention that LIUNA has been a mob-controlled union.
In the Coia disciplinary case, Vaira ruled that the Office of the General Executive Board Attorney, LIUNA's internal prosecutor, failed to demonstrate mob associations by a preponderance of the evidence. Vaira's decision was recently sustained on appeal to LIUNA's appellate hearing officer Neil Eggleston (153 DLR A-11, 8/10/99).
The sole charge of which Coia was found guilty in the decision issued by Vaira involved his purchase of a Ferrari F 40 automobile from Viking Oldsmobile in Providence, R.I., in 1991. Robert Luskin, LIUNA's in-house prosecutor and GEB attorney, maintained that the transaction should be regarded as a direct conflict of interest because Coia personally received something of value from a union vendor. Coia was fined $100,000 for the violation, payable over two years.
Coia, who also could have appealed the portion of the decision levying a fine against him for a conflict-of-interest violation, decided earlier this year not to appeal.
The government source said that under the plea agreement the single felony count to which Coia will plead guilty relates to the conflict of interest charge involving Viking Oldsmobile.
A Justice Department official said Vaira, in several
instances, failed to apply legal precedents established by Eggleston in
previous appellate decisions. He said the department also questioned
several of Vaira's factual findings. Several of those findings pertained
to the credibility of witnesses (57 DLR A-2, 3/25/99).