The New York Times, August 19, 1987
Copyright 1987 The New York Times Company
The New York Times
August
19, 1987, Wednesday, Late City Final Edition
SECTION: Section B; Page 1,
Column 4; Metropolitan Desk
LENGTH: 1314 words
HEADLINE: 20 IN BUILDING
INDUSTRY HELD IN CORRUPTION CASE
BYLINE: LEONARD BUDER
BODY:
Twenty people, including six officers of four unions, were indicted
yesterday in a continuing investigation into labor racketeering and
corruption in the billion-dollar construction industry in New York City.
Law-enforcement authorities said the union officials, whose members are
employed in the concrete, masonry and carpentry fields, had
systematically ''bled'' the construction industry in Queens through a
pattern of extortion, labor bribery, collusion and fraud. The defendants
also included eight contractors and six union shop stewards.
'Affects Every One'
Edward A. McDonald, the head of the Justice Department's organized-crime
strike force in Brooklyn, said corruption in the construction industry
is systemic and pervasive, adding: ''It goes on all the time throughout
the city of New York, throughout the metropolitan area. It affects every
one of us.''
The authorities said the illegal schemes meant that people renting or
buying new residential or commercial properties in Queens paid, in
effect, a ''surcharge'' or ''racketeering tax'' that greatly inflated
their costs.
They cited earlier estimates that 1 percent of the total amount
generally spent on construction in the city went for bribes and
extortion and indicated that the illegal ''surchage'' had to total many
millions of dollars. The indictment, however, specifically mentioned
about $300,000 in reported bribes and extortion payoffs.
Several defendants were charged with taking part in schemes to rig bids
and manipulate the award of construction contracts.
One such scheme, which proved unsuccessful, involved an attempt in late
1985 to rig bids for masonry work on luxury boxes being renovated at
Shea Stadium, the indictment charged.
The 97-count, 81-page Federal indictment, which was returned Monday and
unsealed yesterday, was announced at strike force offices at the Federal
Courthouse in Brooklyn.
Mr. McDonald said the case ''presents a problem of labor racketeering in
its darkest form - an important industry that is in a virtual
stranglehold of segments of organized crime and a group of labor
racketeers and their willing business accomplices.'' He did not
elaborate on the organized-crime involvement.
''The victims are the rank and file, the union members who all too often
are cheated out of their jobs and cheated out of a decent wage,'' Mr.
McDonald said. ''Most importantly, the victims are you and me - all of
us who must pay the price of enormous costs in the construction industry
that are always passed along to the ultimate consumers.''
Although the indictment made no mention of organized crime, Andrew J.
Maloney, the United States Attorney for the Eastern District of New
York, who attended the news conference, said, ''It is widely recognized
that organized crime has a pervasive influence in the construction
industry.''
The unions mentioned in the indictment were
Mason Tenders Locals 13 and 46 of
the Laborers' International Union of North America, Local 531 of the
United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of America and Local 20 of
the Cement and Concrete Workers Union of the Laborers' International
Union.
The lead defendant is Basil Robert Cervone, 75 years old, of North
Woodmere, N.Y., for many years an officer and business agent of
Mason
Tenders Local 13.
''For years he has acted as a corrupt clearinghouse, or an ombudsman if
you will, for labor racketeering in the construction industry in
Queens,'' Mr. McDonald said.
If convicted of racketeering conspiracy, 8 counts of extortion, 56
counts of bribery and 10 other charges, he would face a total of 368
years in prison and fines of about $1 million. He would also have to
forfeit $215,000 that he is accused of obtaining through illegal
activities, as well as four autombiles -three Cadillacs and a Lincoln -
that he was accused of taking as payoffs over the years.
Pattern of Corruption
Also charged with racketeering conspiracy were his two sons, Joseph
Cervone, 50, of Douglaston, Queens, and Basil Robert Cervone Jr., 39, of
Long Beach, N.Y., the president and vice-president, respectively, of
Local 13, and Peter A. Vario, 42, of Howard Beach, Queens. Mr. Vario,
the business manager of
Mason Tenders Local 46, is a nephew
of Paul Vario, a reputed captain of the Lucchese organized crime family,
but Mr. McDonald said the indictment does not cite any Mafia involvement
in the scheme.
The indictment described a pattern of corruption by the union officials
that involved, in some instances, accepting or extorting payoffs from
contractors in return for labor peace, and, in other cases, rigging bids
on projects to reward the companies that paid the bribes and to punish
those that did not.
To pressure contractors to give bribes, the indictment charged, the
union officials threatened to put unproductive workers on the payrolls
and to strictly enforce union contracts to harass employers. Some of the
defendants were also charged with using ''various minority worker
groups'' to threaten, harass and impede contractors unless they made
payoffs to the unions. Mr. McDonald and other the authorities would not
identify those groups.
Although the senior Mr. Cervone failed in his effort to fix bids on the
masonry contract for the renovation of luxury box seats at Shea Stadium,
the indictment said, he and others did succeed in rigging bids on two
other Queens projects - the development of 96 new homes in Howard Beach
and an eight-story commercial building on Prince Street in Flushing.
Also attending the news conference yesterday were Police Commisioner
Benjamin Ward; Thomas L. Sheer, the assistant director of the Federal
Bureau of Investigation who is in charge of the New York Office, and
Ronald Goldstock, the head of the state's Organized Crime Task Force.
The city and state authorities are participating in the investigation
into the construction industry, which was started almost four years ago
by the F.B.I. and the Brooklyn-based strike force and has previously
resulted in a number of indictments and convictions. The investigation
is being supervised by Anthony J. Siano, a special attorney with the
Federal strike force.
These were the other defendants named in the indictment: Henry Walaski,
67, 199-42 24th Avenue, Bayside, Queens, business agent for Local 531 of
the United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners. Joseph Frangipane, 62,
of 18 Wiley Place, Staten Island, business agent of Local 20 of the
Cement and Concrete Workers Union. Michael Belvedere, 59, of 78-34 85th
Street, Glendale, Queens, shop steward,
Mason Tenders Local 13. John
Cerasuolo, 52, of 6740B 193d Lane, Flushing, Queens, shop steward,
Mason
Tenders Local 13. Eltore DiSanto, 64, of Coram, N.Y., shop
steward,
Mason
Tenders Local 13. Vincent DiMarcantonio, 52, of 134-48 58th
Avenue, Flushing, Queens, shop steward,
Mason Tenders Local 13. Nicola
Ranieri, 53, of 200-35 45th Road, Bayside, Queens, shop steward,
Mason
Tenders Local 13. Vincent Vanacore, 60, of Plainview, N.Y., shop
steward,
Mason Tenders Local 13. George
Barba, 45, of Palisades, N. Y., president and owner of Brix Inc.,
masonry contractor. George Bernesser, 55, of Northport, N.Y., president
and owner of Bernesser Masonry Corp. Edward Cummings, 37, of Hicksville,
N. Y., a site supervisor for Benjamin Contracting Corp, developer and
builder of residential properties in the New York area.
Albert Joseph DiBernardo, president of Cadin
Contracting Corp. and an owner of A. J. DiBernardo and Sons Inc.
Richard Fiorenze, 55, of Westbury, N.Y., a builder in the New York area.
Ralph Morea, 53, of 164-45 92d Street, Howard
Beach, Queens, president and owner of Ralp Morea Inc., masonry
contractor.
Anthony Perna, 54, of 29-16 147th Street, Flushing, Queens,
owner and operator of Perna Contracting Co.
Angelo Pironi, 33, of
Elmont, N.Y., president and owner of Pironi Custom Homes Inc.