Shortly after 10 a.m. on Nov. 5, 2013, an aide phoned
ironworkers union boss Joseph Dougherty with the news that Local 401 business
agent Edward Sweeney had been acquitted of threatening a woman who worked for a
nonunion contractor.
"That's good," says Dougherty, in the call
recorded by the FBI. "Ed got lucky. There shouldn't be a crime against
people like that. You should be able to do everything you like against them
[people who use nonunion workers] and it's legal."
Five days of testimony in the federal racketeering trial
of the 73-year-old union business manager have not produced any evidence that
Dougherty - "Joe Doc" to his members - directly ordered attacks on
nonunion job sites.
But the wiretaps and testimony by Local 401 members who
pleaded guilty hoping for lenient sentences made it clear that Dougherty did
not object to using intimidation and violence to ensure jobs for his 700
members, and that he did nothing to stop it.
"This is not just a picket line, it is a war,"
Dougherty told ironworkers during a June 20, 2012, membership meeting at the
Local 401 hall in Northeast Philadelphia.
At Friday's trial session, Assistant U.S. Attorney Robert
J. Livermore showed the jury copies of handwritten reports delivered by
business agent Sean O'Donnell at membership meetings presided over by Dougherty
and other Local 401 officials.
In the reports, O'Donnell takes time to "thank the
Shadow Gang for more good work" - code words for damaging anchor bolts,
construction equipment and other property in order to cause expensive delays
for nonunion builders and contractors. O'Donnell, 44, a member of a large
family of ironworkers, is one of 11 Local 401 members charged with Dougherty
who have already pleaded guilty.
Whether this evidence, including Dougherty's
expletive-punctuated wiretap rants, is enough to convict him of racketeering
conspiracy will be put to the jury next week.
Livermore told U.S. District Judge Michael M. Baylson
that he will rest the prosecution's case Monday.
It's not known for certain whether Dougherty will testify
in his defense but it seems unlikely. Defense attorney Fortunato N. Perri Jr.
told Baylson he did not expect the defense case to take more than two hours.
Dougherty, Local 401's leader for 16 years and a member
for a half-century, is charged with racketeering conspiracy and related
offenses involving about two dozen acts of vandalism and arson on nonunion job
sites between 2008 and 2014.
Livermore has argued that Dougherty ran the union as a
criminal enterprise to convince nonunion contractors to hire union ironworkers.
The vandalism occurred during the recent recession, a
time when construction jobs evaporated and Dougherty and his business agents
struggled to find work for their increasingly desperate members.
In questioning government witnesses, Perri has emphasized
that there has been no proof Dougherty ordered the violence and vandalism.
Perri has argued that Dougherty has been incriminated by
rogue members of Local 401 now eager to testify for prosecutors hoping escape
long prison sentences.
Source: Philly.com
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