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Labor leader John Dougherty, with a bloodied companion, is
shown in a Third Street surveillance video minutes after an altercation
involving a nonunion electrician on Jan. 21.
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Philadelphia Labor Relations at its finest while the union
contractor associations in Philadelphia once again stand by silently in an
apathetic vapor lock, without a word. This
is a rather unfortunate reflection on the contracting industry in our fine
city. It’s time for real leadership to
step forward on the contractor side of our industry and take a position.
Philadelphia police are investigating an incident in
which Electricians union leader John J. Dougherty allegedly hit a nonunion
electrician in the face in an altercation at a worksite.
The nonunion contractor, Joshua Keesee, said that during
the Jan. 21 incident in South Philadelphia, Dougherty broke his nose with one
blow and hit him above an eye with another.
He said Dougherty lost his temper and swung first. Keesee
said he then landed a blow, too, opening a wound in the head of a man who was
with Dougherty.
In a statement Monday, a spokesman for Dougherty said the
union leader had been involved in a "brief physical altercation" and
"was not the aggressor."
The spokesman, Frank Keel, said Keesee had threatened
Dougherty's family. When Dougherty confronted him verbally about that, he said,
Keesee threw a punch at him.
"John Dougherty ducked the contractor's punch and
countered with a punch to the assailant's face," the statement said.
"That was the end of the incident."
Keesee's lawyer, Robert Mozenter, said detectives told
him they had urged the District Attorney's Office to arrest Dougherty and the
men with him on aggravated assault charges. But, Mozenter said, District Attorney
Seth Williams instead referred the case to state Attorney General Kathleen G.
Kane.
A spokesman for Williams did not return repeated calls
seeking comment. Nor did the detective assigned to the case. A spokesman for
Kane confirmed that the District Attorney's Office had contacted her staff to
refer a criminal matter involving Dougherty.
He said it was unclear whether the office would accept
the referral. "We are anticipating learning more in the next few
days," Kane spokesman Chuck Ardo said.
Dougherty's spokesman said Monday, "We firmly
believe that there should be no criminal charges filed in this matter, as John
Dougherty acted purely in self-defense."
The fight broke out near Third and Reed Streets at a
worksite for the construction of a dozen homes that has been controversial for
its use of nonunion labor. Union forces have at times installed their giant
inflatable rat at the site to call attention to the issue.
Keesee, 36, said the incident began about 8:15 a.m. He
said Dougherty, 55, and three other men approached him to complain that he had
a union decal on his truck.
He said Dougherty was pointing his finger and demanding
that he remove the decal. "That's my sticker," he said Dougherty told
him.
Keesee said he agreed to remove the sticker, but also
challenged Dougherty verbally. "I was giving it right back to him,"
he said. "I was telling him, 'I'm not intimidated by you.' "
"He was starting to talk with me with clenched
teeth," Keesee said.
Next, he said, Dougherty "just moved forward and
threw a left-and-right combo."
The incident quickly devolved into a scrum, with Keesee absorbing
blows as the men surrounded him.
Keesee provided video from a security camera outside a
business on Third Street that he said captured the scene just minutes after the
fight ended.
The video has an initial time stamp of 8:22 a.m. and is
dated Jan. 21. It shows another worker on the job pulling Keesee away as
Dougherty and three other men advance toward him.
In the video, a man standing beside Dougherty has blood
near his left eye.
Keesee said he chose not to swing back at Dougherty
because he was worried he would shatter the sunglasses the labor leader was
wearing. He said he also took note of Dougherty's white hair and concluded he
was elderly.
"I definitely didn't want to hit him. The first
shot, I just took," Keesee said. "He hits me twice and they kind of
converge on me."
Keesee acknowledged that he swung back, striking one of
Dougherty's companions in the face.
A witness, James Yates, 64, said Monday that he watched
the clash from the second-floor window of his house on Third Street.
Yates said the incident began with a verbal confrontation
between Keesee and Dougherty and the labor leader's three companions. He said
it appeared to escalate into violence when Dougherty and his group rushed
toward Keesee.
"The four of them charged," he said.
Almost immediately, he said, he lost sight of the
altercation because the men moved outside his field of vision.
Moments later, Yates said, Keesee came back into view,
dashing across the street with Dougherty in pursuit. At that point, he said, he
saw Dougherty throwing punches, but could not tell whether any landed.
Yates provided photographs he took showing Dougherty at
the scene.
Keesee's lawyer, Mozenter, said Williams called him
Friday to tell him he had referred the matter to state prosecutors.
The lawyer said Williams told him he once had "a
run-in" with Dougherty and thus faced a conflict in handling the case.
"He said there was some bad feeling and he didn't
want to give the impression he was persecuting him," Mozenter said.
Keesee said he was upset that Williams had passed the
ball to another agency.
"I feel bad for the citizens because it's like
people in power, people who are affluent, are able to escape," he said.
Court records show that Keesee was charged with
aggravated assault and robbery in 2004, and the charges were dropped. On
Monday, he said he had faced false accusations brought by the mother of his
child.
Mozenter said he was preparing a lawsuit over the
incident involving Dougherty.
Williams, like many in Philadelphia's political
community, has a complicated relationship with "Johnny Doc" and his
Electricians Local 98.
The union backed Daniel McCaffery, now a Common Pleas
Court judge, in the 2009 Democratic primary for district attorney. Williams won
that election.
In 2012, Williams was caught texting, "if u see
Johnny Doc . . . watch your back" to a fellow Democratic politician.
Dougherty later said Williams was suffering from "paranoia."
In 2013, Local 98 gave Williams' campaign $11,500, the
maximum allowable annual contribution from a political action committee, as he
ramped up to run for a second term. The union gave Williams' campaign $6,000 in
2014.
Records show that the union also gave donations to Kane:
$20,000 in 2013.
Source: Philly.com

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