FORMER Ironworkers business agent Edward Sweeney got
riled up whenever a contractor failed to hire his men for jobs. He even fumed
when another union got more work than the Ironworkers.
In an ongoing dispute last year with the carpenters union
over a construction site at 19th and Arch streets in Center City, Sweeney often
complained that the carpenters union was performing ironwork tasks.
In a phone call Aug. 28, 2013, with another member of
Ironworkers Local 401, Sweeney, according to the government's plea memorandum
in his criminal case, told the other member:
"I hate to say it, you wish to get cancer. You hope
you get cancer so you can go there and just shoot every motherf---er
[carpenter] down there. You just want to get cancer and just go there and shoot
everybody. It's insane, man, to have, to actually, to wish, you know, you would
die so that you can go down there and kill them."
Sweeney didn't do that.
But that quote exemplified the apparent pressure he felt
and his willingness to violate the law so that his union would get city jobs.
Sweeney, 55, who walked into the federal courthouse with
a cane, pleaded guilty yesterday to racketeering conspiracy, extortion and
several arson-related counts. As one of the Ironworkers' four ex-business
agents, he was part of its leadership, headed by then-longtime business manager
Joseph Dougherty, who prosecutors say ran the union with an "iron
fist."
"As a business agent, Sweeney felt enormous
pressure" from union members and its leadership "to convince nonunion
contractors to hire union ironworkers and occasionally to ensure that other
unions were not performing ironwork," according to his plea memorandum,
written by Assistant U.S. Attorney Robert Livermore.
When he failed, Dougherty "verbally abused Sweeney
in the union hall and during union meetings," the memo says.
Sweeney apparently felt pressured to prove himself for an
upcoming union election. Another faction, which allegedly included Dougherty,
supported another member, Richard Ritchie, to replace Sweeney, according to
court documents.
"Dougherty, Ritchie and others began to ridicule
Sweeney at meetings and spread rumors that he was a drunk," Livermore
wrote in Sweeney's plea memo.
"In response to the pressure, Sweeney began to use a
team of ironworkers loyal to him," including James Walsh, and resorted to
"nightwork" - or criminal activity done on behalf of the union - in
an effort to force contractors to hire union members, according to his plea
memo.
Among the crimes Sweeney instigated as business agent
were a December 2012 arson at the construction site of a new Quaker
meetinghouse in Chestnut Hill and a July 2013 arson at the site of a warehouse
on Grays Avenue in Southwest Philly. Dougherty and Sweeney gave Walsh an
acetylene torch in both instances, prosecutors say, and Walsh used it to cut
through the buildings' metal infrastructure.
Sweeney faces a mandatory-minimum sentence of 15 years
behind bars when he is sentenced Jan. 27 by U.S. District Judge Michael
Baylson.
Yesterday, another Ironworkers member, Shawn Bailey, 34,
pleaded guilty to one act of extortion. He helped damage the warehouse being
constructed on Grays Avenue. Bailey, unlike Sweeney, was charged by a process
called criminal information rather than indictment. He faces sentencing Feb. 2.
He and Sweeney were the fifth and sixth defendants in the
Ironworkers case to plead guilty. Two others are to plead guilty today.
Dougherty, 73; Ritchie; and two former business agents,
Christopher Prophet and William O'Donnell, will face trial Jan. 5.
Source: Philly.com
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