The New York Times, August 23, 1987
Copyright 1987 The New York Times Company
The New York Times
August
23, 1987, Sunday, Late City Final Edition
SECTION: Section 4; Page 6,
Column 1; Week in Review Desk
LENGTH: 311 words
HEADLINE: CORRUPTION CASE;
20 INDICTED IN BUILDING INDUSTRY
BODY:
TWELVE union officials, seven construction contractors and a site
supervisor were indicted last week on charges of bribery, extortion and
bid-rigging that prosecutors said had imposed a ''racketeering tax'' for
years on the construction industry in Queens.
The indictment did not mention organized crime, but Edward A. McDonald,
the head of the Justice Department's organized crime strike force in
Brooklyn, 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 added that the
pattern of corruption outlined in the indictment, amounting to a
surcharge of millions of dollars yearly on new residential and
commercial properties, ''goes on all the time throughout the city of New
York, throughout the metropolitan area.''
Chief among the defendants is a 75-year-old former business agent of
Mason
Tenders Local 13 of the Laborers' International Union of North
America, Basil Robert Cervone, described by Mr. McDonald as having
''acted as a corrupt clearinghouse, or an ombudsman if you will,'' for
extortion by union officials and bid-rigging among the contractors.
One scheme, according to the indictment, involved an unsuccessful
attempt in late 1985 to rig bids for masonry work on luxury boxes at
Shea Stadium. And some of those indicted were charged with using
''various minority worker groups'' to threaten, harass and impede
contractors unless they made payoffs to the unions.
One union official was still being sought; the other defendants pleaded
not guilty. Prosecutors said that about 90 convictions or guilty pleas
had been obtained since the strike force and the F.B.I. began their
investigation of corruption in the New York City building industry in
1978.