Testifying Publicly, Carey Blames Aides for
Teamsters Campaign Irregularities
By Frank Swoboda
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, January 22, 1998
Publicly testifying under oath for the first time since the start of the campaign finance scandal that has rocked the
nation's largest trade union, Teamsters President Ron Carey yesterday denied any
wrongdoing, portraying himself as a leader who trusted those around him and is now paying
the price.
Testifying before the three-member Independent Review Board, which
is considering his ouster from the union, Carey said he was a "bottom-line" kind
of guy who spent much of his time out on the road and didn't want to be bothered with a
lot of bureaucratic details. "I viewed my job as not just sitting in my office.
That's a waste," Carey said. "I reserve for myself the
high-priority areas."
Carey, who will resume his testimony under cross-examination
today, sounded as though he were still on the campaign stump for much of his time in the
witness box. His attorney, Reid Weingarten, gently led him through the highlights of his
five-year term as Teamsters president.
The 61-year-old union leader told how he had spent his entire
professional life in the Teamsters, working his way up from shop steward to international
president. He told how he had rid the union of "the luxury and all the perks" enjoyed by past leaders of the Teamsters so that he could serve the members
and "the working families of America."
Carey and William Hamilton, the union's former director of
government affairs, are on trial before the review board, which has accused them of
embezzling money from the union's general treasury to help finance Carey's reelection
campaign. In more than 300 cases, the review board has never exonerated anyone facing its
censure.
Carey narrowly defeated James P. Hoffa in the 1996 election, but
the election results have been thrown out and Carey has since been
disqualified from running for office again because of the financing allegations involving
his campaign. Carey has previously testified under oath in depositions before other
government offices investigating the Teamsters -- but he had not
previously testified in public.
The 1.4 million-member union has been operating under court
supervision since 1989 as part of a consent decree signed by the union with the Justice
Department to settle civil racketeering charges. Carey, running as the reform candidate
pledging to rid the union of corruption, was elected in 1991 in the first direct election
of national officers in Teamsters history. Both the 1991 and the 1996 elections were
conducted under strict government supervision.
Lawyers for the two union officials have argued that both were the
victims of Jere Nash, who managed Carey's 1996 reelection campaign and
has since been convicted of criminal fraud charges, and Martin Davis, another Carey
campaign operative convicted of fraud who was also a business associate of Nash. Nash and
Davis have not been sentenced and are cooperating with federal prosecutors in New York who
continue to investigate the Carey campaign.
Carey and Hamilton did score a potential victory
in the courtroom yesterday when the U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York
agreed to ask that Nash be allowed to testify at the review board's hearing to give the
two men a chance to confront their accuser face-to-face and under oath. Late in the day, a
request was made to also allow Davis to appear. The U.S. attorney's office had originally
blocked both men's appearances.
Attorneys for Davis and Martin can still refuse to allow their
clients to appear, and the review board does not have subpoena power to force them to
testify.
At the heart of the allegations against both
Carey and Hamilton are what have been referred to as "swap schemes" in which the
Teamsters would give money to various grass-roots political groups that support Democratic
candidates in exchange for those groups arranging to have their political friends make
donations to the Carey campaign. Under these schemes, the government alleges, the campaign
embezzled union money to illegally finance Carey's election efforts.
At one point in the hearing, Carey's attorneys called a veteran
FBI lie-detector expert to the stand to tell how he had tested Carey late last year and he
had passed with flying colors. "There weren't any indications of deception," Barry Colvert told the hearing.
But Colvert's findings were met with some skepticism by two of the
three review board members -- former federal judge Frederick Lacey and former FBI director
William Webster.
© Copyright 1998 The Washington Post Company