Washington Times
Letters To The Editor
February 13, 2000
RE: Letter [02/11/00] from Michael Bearse,
General Counsel for Laborers' International Union of North America
LIUNA is Proud of Arthur A.
Coia's Work
To Whom It May Concern:
In coming to Arthur A. Coia's defense, LIUNA General Counsel Michael Bearse is attempting to hide the criminal enterprise operating within LIUNA, just as he did when he appeared, before a U.S. House subcommittee, with me & in counterpoint to my sworn testimony regarding union corruption.
[Impediments To Union Democracy, U.S. House
Subcommittee On Education & The Workforce, May 4, 1998].
Bearse's letter, like his sworn testimony, is
specious down to the last "and & the".
Bearse also has the distinction of being a
defendant in a Civil RICO suit 397 CV 02502 JCH] in Bridgeport Connecticut in which LIIUNA
"General President Emeritus" Arthur A. Coia is also mentioned as a
"wrongdoer".
This December, 1997 Connecticut suit, anchored in
the Racketeer Influence & Corrupt Organizations Act, [RICO], has gone through 141
dockets & 14 affidavits where the defendants have filed multiple protective orders
& multiple motions to quash.
Coia, using the "successful internal reform
program", & with the blessing of the U.S. Justice Department [DOJ], has
selectively purged his enemies &, at the same time, through his group, has extorted
union democracy in the District & Commonwealth of Connecticut.
Specifically, Coia associates-in-fact have been
charged with direct predicate acts of RICO including mail fraud, wire fraud, extortion, a
29 USC 530 assault, & witness- tampering in the form of multiple schemes & overt
acts, all facilitated by LIUNA in-house-prosecutor Robert Luskin & through the purview
of the LIUNA/DOJ "Operational Agreement".
I am a victim of the same actions as enumerated in
the DOJ 1994 RICO complaint against Coia, which said he used "force, violence &
fear of physical & economic injury to create a climate of intimidation &
fear".
In Reply To Bearse:
Coia has "42 years of service" to the
union, making him 14 years of age when he started as a construction laborer.
Coia exited, unscathed, by pleading out to a deal,
courtesy of his handpicked in-house-prosecutor Robert Luskin [also a RICO defendant] &
U.S. prosecutors.
Coia paid back $100,000 stolen from the taxpayers
plus a $10,000 "fine".
Coia's 1998 salary of $335,674 was augmented by an
"allowance" of $86,120.
Coia is being paid $335,000+ in retirement ,
courtesy of his handpicked Executive Board.
Bearse's hollow charge of "anti-union
propaganda", gives hypocrisy a bad name.
Sincerely,
Stephen Manos
RICO Plaintiff & Vice-President, [Forcibly Retired]
Laborers' Local 230, Hartford, CT