ASSOCIATED PRESS
Hoffa: Union Will Police Itself
By Alice Ann Love
Associated Press Writer
July 30, 1999
WASHINGTON (AP) -- Teamsters President James P.
Hoffa is asking the Justice Department to let the union police itself against organized
crime in its ranks after a decade of federal supervision. "It's time for a fresh
review of this," Hoffa said.
The union will adopt a new code of conduct to be enforced from
within, Hoffa announced Thursday. Also, the Teamsters have hired a former federal
prosecutor to investigate whether mob influences still remain 10 years of government
supervision. "If there are vestiges of organized crime, we're
going to find them and we're going to ferret them out," said Hoffa.
Hoffa won the Teamsters' presidency and was sworn in in March
after promising to root out corruption and seek an end to federal oversight that the union
agreed to in 1989 in order to avoid racketeering charges brought by the Justice
Department.
In a letter, dated June 16, to Deputy Attorney General Eric
Holder, Hoffa said he believes that the Teamsters can demonstrate that there is no longer
a need for federal intervention in their affairs.
A spokesman for Mary Jo White, the U.S. attorney for the Southern
District of New York who is the Justice Department official in charge of Teamsters
oversight, said that her office had replied to Hoffa's letter inviting union officials to
set a date to meet with her. "We look forward to meeting and working with the new
leadership of the IBT (International Brotherhood of Teamsters) to ensure that the progress
under the consent decree continues," said White's spokesman, Marvin Smilon.
Ken Paff, a national organizer for Teamsters for a Democratic
Union, a faction that opposed Hoffa's election, said the union's recent campaign finance
scandal should be taken as proof that some federal oversight is still needed.
Hoffa's election to the Teamsters' presidency last year came after
his loss to incumbent Ron Carey in 1996 was set aside when investigators found that
Carey's campaign had improperly benefited from donations the union made to third-party
political organizations. "One of the chief functions of federal monitors has been to
ensure fair elections," said Paff. "Are we going to stop having supervision of
our elections?"
Hoffa's father, Jimmy Hoffa, built the Teamsters into a national
powerhouse, but was sent to prison for jury tampering and misusing union funds. He
disappeared in 1975, and is presumed a victim of organized crime. "I think he'd be
proud of what I'm doing," Hoffa said.