Slate Magazine August 3, 1996, Saturday
Copyright 1996 Microsoft Corporation
Slate Magazine
August
3, 1996, Saturday
SECTION: the gist
LENGTH: 898 words
HEADLINE: The Clintons and
the Mob
BYLINE: Jodie T. Allen
BODY:
The
Laborers' International Union of North America represents 750,000
construction and waste-removal workers. Their leader is named
Arthur
A.
Coia.
Coia is a major contributor to Democratic causes, and also has
had extensive social dealings with the Clintons. Early last year, the
Justice Department allowed
Coia to oversee a massive cleanup
of his union, rather than filing a racketeering lawsuit, removing
Coia,
and putting the union under government control.
The
Laborers' ties to the mob have been studied often, most recently
in a Justice Department investigation begun during the Bush
administration. The October 1994 report of that probe charged, among
many other specifics, that the union's presidents, including
Coia,
have been controlled and influenced by organized crime figures for
decades.
Coia,
whose entire career has been in the
Laborers' union, is a wealthy man
thanks in part to real-estate dealings with his own. His father was also
a top union official who, according to federal investigators, had
long-standing mob contacts.
Coia's ties to the Clintons began
in early 1993, when the
Laborers loaned $100,000 to
Clinton's inaugural committee. After
Coia rose to the union presidency
in March 1993, he and his wife had numerous contacts with the Clintons.
A House Judiciary subcommittee (which held hearings on this matter in
July) has issued a list of more than 100 transactions between the two
families extending through May of this year. These include watching an
NBA game together at the White House, receptions, bill signings,
breakfasts, dinners, gift exchanges (an autographed basketball for the
president, the book of Psalms for Hillary) and an invitation (declined)
from Clinton to
Coia to join him on a trip to
Haiti. The Haiti invitation was relayed by White House Deputy Chief of
Staff Harold Ickes, a lawyer who used to represent the union.
Coia also aided Clinton
politically. The
Laborers' PAC contributed more than
$2 million to the Democratic Party and its candidates in 1993 and 1994.
Coia broke with most of the labor
movement to support NAFTA.
Coia personally contributed $1,000
to the Clintons' legal defense fund, and helped organize Democratic
Party fund-raisers. He joined the board of Back to Business, a group of
prominent Democrats dedicated to responding to attacks on the Clintons'
integrity.
In January 1994, Hillary Clinton was scheduled to give a satellite
address to top
Laborers' union officials. The
chief of the Justice Department's organized-crime section recommended in
a memo that she avoid direct contact with
Coia, if possible. In September
1994, the White House considered appointing
Coia to the presidential council on
competitiveness. It submitted his name to the FBI for a background
check. The FBI warned that
Coia is a criminal associate of the
New England Patriarca organized crime family and was under confidential
investigation. The appointment was dropped. Two weeks later, however,
Coia met with Clinton in the Oval
Office to share some thoughts and ideas, according to his thank-you
note. The next month,
Coia and his wife attended a White
House dinner at which the president played the saxophone.
On Nov. 4, 1994,
Coia received a handwritten note
from Clinton thanking him for a gorgeous custom-made golf club and
congratulating him on becoming a grandfather. The same day,
Coia received a copy of the Justice
Department's report concluding that he was controlled and influenced by
the mob. In February 1995, a week after Hillary Clinton addressed a
Laborers' conference in Florida
(see photo),
Coia and the Justice Department
signed an agreement that gave
Coia until 1998 to clean up the
union under government supervision rather than placing the union under
direct federal control.
This agreement is central to the controversy. Did
Coia get special treatment because
of his Clinton connection? In more than 15 other racketeering cases, the
government filed the case in court and ultimately took over control of
the union. Defenders of the
Laborers' arrangement argue that it
will clean up the union just as effectively, and at less expense. Back
in 1987, Newt Gingrich and other Republicans were among 245 House
members who wrote a letter to Attorney General Ed Meese specifically
opposing a federal takeover of four unions including the
Laborers, and protesting the use of
federal racketeering laws against the unions.
Since the agreement,
Coia has hired 50 former FBI agents
and several former federal prosecutors to pursue the internal reform. So
far, that effort has ousted 27 union members, put four local unions
under a central trusteeship, and overturned four tainted local
elections. Federal field agents and prosecutors nevertheless have been
quoted (anonymously) saying that the union is still mobbed up. They say
the government has made a sweetheart deal that is simply allowing
Coia to purge his rivals.
At the subcommittee hearing, the key Justice Department officials
testified that the White House was not involved in the settlement with
the
Laborers in any way. No direct
evidence to the contrary was produced. Democrats note that the
Republican Party has had plenty of contacts with disreputable unions.
Ronald Reagan gladly took endorsements from the Longshoremen and the
Teamsters, two unions that were the targets of FBI racketeering probes
at the time.