The New York Times
Mob Linked to Unions, Senate Panel Is Told
April 28, 1983
AP WASHINGTON, April 27, A reputed Chicago crime
figure, Tony Accardo, "hand-picked" the presidents of two labor unions as part
of a plan that skimmed millions of dollars from employee benefit funds, a witness told
Senate investigators today.
The leaders were identified as Edward T. Hanley of the Hotel and
Restaurant Employees International Union and Angelo Fosco of the Laborers International
Union.
The witness, Joseph Hauser, who formerly operated companies that
sold health and life insurance to unions and their members, appeared before the Permanent
Subcommittee on Investigations.
Mr. Hauser called Mr. Accardo an "organized crime leader,
whom I have known for many years as Joe Batters." In a telephone interview, Carl M.
Walsh, a Chicago lawyer who has represented Mr. Accardo, said he did not think there would
"any comment" from his client. Mr. Walsh said that when Mr. Hauser appeared as a
Federal witness in previous instances "juries have universally disbelieved his
testimony."
Victor Kamber, a spokesman for the laborers union in Washington, called Mr. Hauser a "pathological liar," adding that "his aspersion on the character of Angelo Fosco is outrageous."
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