|
The Buffalo News
Port security at risk from mafia,
suit claims
By DAVID B. CARUSO Associated Press 3/12/2006 |
|
NEW YORK - Justice Department lawyers have
warned that a nefarious element has infiltrated important East Coast
ports, but they weren't talking about terrorists or Arab shipping
companies.
They were talking about the mafia. In a civil
lawsuit, prosecutors have accused the International
Longshoremen's Association, the 65,000-member union that supplies
labor to ports from Florida to Maine, of being a "vehicle for
organized crime" on the waterfront. See The U.S. attorney's office asked a judge to seize control of the union, remove its officers and "put an end to the conspiracy among union officials, organized crime figures and others that has plagued some of the nation's most important ports for decades." The allegations, assailed by the union as unjust and untrue, are inching toward trial amid heightened concern over port security. The recent furor has revolved around the planned purchase of several U.S. shipping terminal operations by a company based in the United Arab Emirates. Critics say Dubai Ports World's Middle East ownership makes it ripe for infiltration by terrorists. The company moved to defuse the controversy Thursday by pledging to turn over its American operations to a U.S. company. But some port security experts say America already has a fifth column, of sorts, at work on its docks: gangsters who have made the piers friendly territory for drug smugglers and cargo thieves. "Do we really think that terrorists aren't going to exploit this situation?" asked New York Sen. Michael Balboni, R-Nassau County, chairman of the State Senate's Homeland Security Committee. Terrorists could use gangland networks to their advantage, said Joseph King, a former Customs Service agent and now a professor at the John Jay College of Criminal Justice. "It is an invitation to smuggling of all kinds, whether it is heroin, or weapons, or human trafficking," King said. "Instead of bringing in 50 kilograms of heroin, what would stop them from bringing in five kilograms of plutonium?" ILA spokesman James McNamara said any suggestion that the union poses a security risk is "ludicrous." "Nobody in America cares more about port security than the longshoremen," he said. The ILA was among the early critics of the DP World deal, calling on the Bush administration Feb. 21 to scrutinize the company. "The union has done a lot, and has lobbied hard, to improve port security," said ILA lawyer Howard Goldstein. From 1977 through 1981, prosecutors won conviction of 52 union officials on various mob and waterfront racketeering-related charges. In the most recent major case, reputed Gambino boss Peter Gotti was convicted in 2003 of waterfront racketeering. While denying it was ever under mob control, the ILA has implemented reforms, including the appointment of two retired judges as independent monitors of union ethics. Copyright 1999 - 2006 - The Buffalo News |