Chicago Tribune,
JUDGE NAMES 2 TO RID UNION OF MOB
INFLUENCE
Matt O'Connor, Tribune Staff Writer.
September 1, 1999
A former federal prosecutor and a retired Illinois Supreme Court
justice were appointed Tuesday to lead the fight to rid the Laborers Union's Chicago
District Council of mob influence. A federal judge overseeing the case appointed Steven
Miller, a veteran of 18 years in the U.S. attorney's office in Chicago, as monitor, in
effect a prosecutor who will oversee the bringing of internal union charges to oust
officers with alleged ties to organized crime.
Seymour F. Simon, a former judge on both the Illinois Supreme
Court and the Illinois Appellate Court, has been named the adjudications officer--the
judge who will decide what discipline if any to impose after presiding over hearings
resulting from any charges.
The appointments come less than three weeks after the district
council, an umbrella group of 21 Chicago-area laborers locals, agreed to a consent decree
in order to settle a civil racketeering lawsuit filed in federal court in Chicago by its
international union and the federal government.
The consent decree approved by U.S. District Judge Robert
Gettleman on Tuesday gives expanded powers to the monitor to go after mob influence in the
union. In the racketeering suit, the international union and federal authorities alleged
the district council has been dominated for three decades by the Chicago mob and laid out
in detail nearly two dozen organized crime members, their associates and close relatives
who served as officers or supervised some of the union's $1.5 billion in pension and
benefit funds.
The monitorship is scheduled to last for at least two years,
though Simon said the union hopes the cleanup can be finished sooner. "The aim of the
union is to get the mission accomplished quickly and get the government out of the union .
. . certainly within two years and if possible sooner," Simon said. Gettleman
personally pushed for Simon, according to Thomas Walsh, chief of the civil division for
the U.S. attorney's office here.
Simon, 84, who also served on the Chicago City Council and the
Cook County Board in the 1950s and 1960s, still practices law for the Chicago law firm of
Rudnick & Wolfe.
As a federal prosecutor, Miller rose to head the public corruption
unit of the U.S. attorney's office in Chicago and developed a talent for prosecuting
long-unsolved homicide cases by uncovering related financial frauds. Among his most
publicized cases was his prosecution of horse trader Richard Bailey in the murder-for-hire
of Helen Vorhees Brach, the long-missing candy fortune heiress. That probe uncovered the
killing of numerous show horses for insurance money around the country.
Miller has been in private practice at the Chicago law firm of
Sachnoff & Weaver for the last five years. In addition to the appointments of Miller
and Simon, Robert E. Bloch, a Chicago labor lawyer, will continue as trustee of the
district council.
Copyright (c) 1999 Chicago Tribune