LABORERS MOVING AGAINST DISTRICT
By John O'Brien
Tribune Staff Writer
February 10, 1998
Describing the Chicago lodge as a front for criminal
activity and its officials as mob members or their associates, the Laborers International
Union of North America moved forward Monday in its attempt to seize control of the local
unit and oust its leaders.
The union is trying to safeguard the $1.5 billion in
pension and health and welfare funds of its beleaguered Chicago District Council. And on
Monday it gained the support of a hearing officer, who in a 91-page ruling agreed that the
laborers district council is closely linked to organized crime here.
The district council, which represents 21 local unions in
the Chicago area, is led by Bruno Caruso, whose dual salaries as council chief and head of
Local 1001 total $172,000-a-year. He is the son of the late Frank Caruso, a reputed mob
boss in Chicago's Chinatown area.
Caruso has steadfastly denied allegations of being a
puppet of mobsters, instead blaming union President Arthur Coia for fabricating charges to
consolidate power. Caruso had opposed Coia's re-election in 1996, pledging higher wages
and safer working conditions.
Within hours of the takeover decision by hearing officer
Peter Vaira, there were these developments in an unprecedented tug of war between factions
of the 450,000-member laborers union:
Officials of the Schaumburg-based
investigative firm of Quest Consultants International, acting as union inspectors,
appeared at the Northwest Side office of the district council demanding the surrender of
door keys and financial records. They were denied admission following a brief
confrontation outside the office at 6121 W. Diversey Ave.
Lawyers for the international went into U.S. District
Court seeking an order of enforcement to place the Chicago District Council under
trusteeship, headed by labor lawyer Robert Bloch. A hearing on their request is expected
Tuesday.
The district's 19,000 laborers--including
some City of Chicago employees--haul trash, sweep streets, dig sewers and perform dozens
of other gritty construction jobs.
The release of Vaira's takeover decision, coupled with
eviction efforts by the international, follows 19 days of closed-door hearings last year
into charges by Robert Luskin, the union's general executive board attorney, that the
Chicago council is mob dominated and serves as a hiring hall for shady characters.
Luskin, a Washington lawyer, was named to the post in an
agreement between the union and the U.S. Justice Department that calls for the union to
clean house or face a government takeover.
In Chicago on Monday, Luskin aide and attorney Dwight
Bostwick issued a statement denouncing the Chicago District Council, branding it as
corrupt and contending its leaders are chosen in "little more than a game of mob
musical chairs."
Legal papers filed in federal court identified Caruso as
"at least an associate" of mobsters while portraying several district delegates
as either pals of or, in one instance, as a "made member" of the Chicago Outfit.
"The day has long passed when unions can regard
investigations . . . by the government or the media as `us against them' or as attacks
against the solidarity of the labor movement," Vaira, a former federal prosecutor,
said in his decision. "If labor is to remain a viable force in the marketplace today,
it cannot rely on government . . . to effect a cleanup. The labor
movement can no longer close its eyes to corruption."
Transcripts of the internal union hearings obtained by
the Tribune show questionable alliances between Chicago District Council officials and
people identified as mob figures. The witnesses at these hearings
included former federal agents, police investigators and turncoat mobsters.
Chief among them were Michael Corbitt, a former police
chief in suburban Willow Springs, and Robert Cooley, a former criminal defense lawyer.
They told of witnessing Bruno Caruso and others meeting with crime
figures away from union job sites, in restaurants and nightclubs or at suburban parking
lots and golf courses.
Corbitt is serving a 20-year sentence for bribery,
extortion and racketeering. Among the crimes for which he remains behind bars was his role
in the cover-up of the 1982 murder of Dianne Masters, a suburban college
trustee. Cooley helped expose judicial corruption in Cook County Circuit Court a decade
ago.
Corbitt recounted how one-time Chicago mob chieftain Sam
Giancana put in the word that enabled him to become a police officer in Willow Springs. "He just told me one thing," Corbitt said of his
benefactor, Giancana, whom he got to know while servicing slot machines. "Just
remember your friends," he quoted the mobster as telling him. "Just remember who
put you in this position."
As a money courier for the mob, Corbitt said he had
access to top mob bosses and officials of the laborers union such as Al
Pilotto of Local 5 in Chicago Heights and Vincent Solano of Local 1 in Chicago.
He told of seeing Bruno Caruso and
Bruno's brother, Frank, a power in the union's health and welfare fund, in the company of
the late Pat Marcy, a 1st Ward political fixer and known associate of rackets bosses. He
said he saw Bruno Caruso give Marcy an envelope that investigators say contained mob
street tax.
It's unclear whether Corbitt and Cooley will be summoned
by the federal judge to whom the trusteeship bid now goes for review. But three union
inspectors from the staff of Quest Consultants--former FBI agents Joseph
Griffin, Robert Scigalski and Jack O'Rourke--are listed as available to testify if
Caruso's lawyers wage a fight at Tuesday's scheduled court hearing.