11.24.96
Bruno
Caruso: A challenge to Coia
By JOHN E. MULLIGAN
Journal-Bulletin Washington Bureau
WASHINGTON -- With its marching bands, its laser shows and its
morning-in-America videos - starring Arthur A. Coia in the presidential role - this year's
convention of the Laborers Union looked and sounded like a mainstream political pep rally.
Then Bruno Caruso took the stage at the Las Vegas Convention
Center.
Coia's lone challenger conjured up the spirits of Laborers confabs
past, where mobsters in the front rows buffered the dais from the rank-and-file, and a
reform candidate was once rewarded with more punches than votes.
Boasting of his nerve at one point, Caruso uttered a barnyard term
rarely heard from presidential pulpits.
Mocking Coia's piety later on, Caruso folded his hands and intoned
theatrically: "Hail Mary, full of grace . . ."
And railing against the anti-corruption deal that Coia cut with
federal prosecutors, Caruso griped about the telephones at union headquarters in
Washington.
Union people in the field hate to call headquarters
now, he said. "Now when I call, we have to talk in codes, we have to answer in
codes," Caruso said. "There is fear and concern that phones are being
tapped."
Most of the 2,100 delegates were silent during Caruso's
presidential nomination acceptance speech, but a few hundred cheered wildly from Chicago's
island on the convention floor.
Through images like that one, some outsiders read the Laborers
election the way Kremlinologists once studied the May Day parades in Red Square - viewing
Caruso's candidacy as an elaborately-coded protest campaign from Chicago
- the traditional seat of Laborers power and, allegedly, of mob influence.
Caruso is president of Laborers Local 1001 and of
the Chicago Laborers District Council.
Caruso's alleged Mafia lineage is laid out in the same 1994
federal racketeering draft that accused Coia - and his father before him - of mob
associations.
The document said his late father, Frank "Skid" Caruso, was a member of La Cosa Nostra.
His brother Frank, President of Local 1006, is described as
"an associate of the Chicago LCN family," and a cousin, Leo Caruso, as Frank's
second in command.
Caruso has denounced media suggestions of "guilt by
association." Asked in an interview in Las Vegas about the allegations against his
father, Caruso said, "My father has been deceased for 13 years. Maybe in my younger
days I wasn't too understanding of these things in life, but I just remember him as a
loving father, who has given me my values."
Attorney Coia, who has likewise denied mob ties and wrongdoing,
made a convention speech full of references to his efforts to prepare the union for the
21st century and to the reforms undertaken on his watch.
Caruso answered back in his speech.
"I am not opposed to reform. I am not opposed to change,
innovation. I am opposed to people controlling this union who are not elected," he
said, referring to the battery of lawyers and ex-FBI agents under
contract to purge the union of corruption, and the federal prosecutors monitoring the
cleanup process.
Coia's forces buried Caruso's package of proposed constitutional
changes, which would have watered down the powers of the internal
investigators, possibly triggering a federal takeover of the Laborers.
But Caruso portrayed his efforts as a campaign for democracy in
the Laborers.
"Union democracy 'crapped out' in Las Vegas," Caruso
says in his campaign literature. The vote between him and Coia "is the final roll of
the dice!!!"
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