Five leaders of Ironworkers Local 410, previously indicted
in February by federal prosecutors, are facing additional charges of extortion
for targeting nonunion workers who were building elementary schools and other
public facilities in the Philadelphia suburbs.
According to a federal grand jury, business agents of the
union would approach nonunion contractors working at the job sites and demand
they hire union ironworkers. If their demands were not met, a crew from the
ironworkers union called the “Shadow Gang” would “sneak into the construction
site at night, use sledgehammers to smash the anchor bolts of the building, and
damage equipment.”
Each incident caused tens of thousands of dollars in damages
and delays. Elementary schools under construction in Wallingford and Sharon
Hill were targets along with a firehouse in Eddystone, an assisted living
facility in Horsham, and numerous other sites in the Pennsylvania counties
surrounding Philadelphia.
In February, the FBI arrested 10 of the ironworkers'
leaders, including its president Joseph Dougherty, and charged them with
racketeering.
Charged today with additional counts of extortion and
additional allegations related to a RICO conspiracy were Dougherty, Christopher
Prophet, Richard Ritchie, Edward Sweeney and William O’Donnell. Union member
Francis Sean O’Donnell is facing a count related to the RICO charges, federal
prosecutors said.
Authorities previously charged Dougherty and his “goon
squad” in connection with attacks on workers at a Toys R Us under construction
in King of Prussia, setting fire to a Quaker meetinghouse in Chestnut Hill, and
threatening workers and damaging equipment at several other sites.
Source: Philly.com
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