Los Angeles Times
LABORERS' UNION OFFICIAL OUSTED
INTERNATIONAL OFFICE REMOVES O.C. CHIEF FOR
USING UNION FUNDS FOR PERSONAL TRAVEL
EDMUND SANDER, TIMES STAFF WRITER
April 14, 2000
The head of one of Orange County's largest unions was ousted
Thursday by its international leadership for using union funds to take personal trips to
San Francisco and Las Vegas, union officials said.
Ruben L. Gomez, business manager for the 3,100-member Laborers'
International Union Local 652 in Santa Ana, was also banned from holding office for five
years and ordered to repay an undetermined amount for the cost of two 1997 trips.
The removal of a local leader is highly unusual, but the drastic
action was taken by an international union that has been in the spotlight in recent years
for charges of corruption.
The Laborers International Union, with about 750,000 members
nationwide, continues to work closely with the U.S. Department of Justice to implement
self-policing measures and ethical reforms--steps the international agreed to take to
avert a federal takeover in 1995.
In the Gomez case, officials of the international union conducted
an internal investigation after allegations emerged in 1998, and the international
subsequently decided that Gomez should be removed.
Gomez, who was elected the local's top officer in 1994, appealed
that ruling as "arbitrary and draconian." But an international union appellate
officer upheld the punishment last week, and his removal was effective Thursday.
Gomez, 47, did not return telephone calls Thursday.
Officials at the U.S. Department of Labor were also investigating
the matter but said they have taken no enforcement actions.
Gomez was the highest-paid official at the local level, receiving
nearly $100,000 a year. He can remain a union member.
In ousting Gomez, the international's independent hearing officer
who handled the investigation wrote in January: "While the amounts of money obtained
by Gomez in this case are not large, the severity of the misappropriation is magnified by
the lengths to which Gomez . . . went to carry out the scheme."
According to the union, Gomez contrived with other union officials
to send bogus invitations to himself, requesting his attendance at fictitious union
meetings or seminars in other cities. Gomez then used the invitations to receive the local
board's reimbursement for the trips.
The Gomez case began in 1998, when union officials first accused
Gomez of misusing union funds for personal travel.
Mario Hernandez, an organizer at Local 652, was also barred from
holding office for five years for helping Gomez obtain official stationery belonging to
another union and preparing one of the fake invitations.
Hernandez could not be reached for comment.
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