McLaughlin Out As CLC Head After
Indictment;
Allege Part of $2.2M Theft Came From Union
Funds
By RICHARD STEIER
The AFL-CIO New York City Central Labor Council, its
image bludgeoned by a Federal indictment Oct. 17 charging that its leader stole
$2.2 million from operations ranging from the organization itself to a Queens
Little League, took the first step toward repairing the damage two days later
when it suspended President Brian McLaughlin without pay.
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| BRIAN M.
McLAUGHLIN: A stunning fall.
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Mr. McLaughlin
had been on a paid leave of absence since Sept. 1 because of the Federal probe
of his activities, which exploded into public attention in March when
investigators raided the CLC's Manhattan offices.
'Had to Suspend Him'
Denis Hughes, the president of the State AFL-CIO who chairs the CLC board,
announced the suspension following a lengthy conference call in which he said
none of the dozen-plus board members who participated questioned the need to act
strongly.
Notwithstanding the presumption of innocence to which Mr. McLaughlin is
entitled, he said, the "serious allegations in the indictment, which included
financial impropriety involving assets of the Central Labor Council," warranted
the suspension. "We have a fiduciary obligation to do this," he explained.
Mr. McLaughlin, a Queens Assemblyman who had announced he would not seek
re-election even before the CLC office raid, pleaded not guilty before U.S.
Magistrate Judge James Francis in Manhattan. His attorney, Jonathan P. Bach, did
not return a call seeking comment on the charges contained in the massive
indictment.
'Case About Greed'
U.S. Attorney Michael J. Garcia, during a press conference in his lower
Manhattan offices after Mr. McLaughlin was arraigned, called it "a case about
greed - about a high-ranking union official ripping off" his own members as well
as other entities including a CLC program meant to benefit immigrants and a
Little League in the Electchester section of Queens that is both Mr.
McLaughlin's power base and his former home.
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The
Chief-Leader/Pat Arnow
'STOLE FROM ALL THOSE HE SERVED': City Investigation
Commissioner Rose Gill Hearn says Brian McLaughlin committed theft
'of enormous amounts of money from the very people he was supposed
to serve - his constituents, members of the public, his union
brothers and sisters and even a Little League program set up for the
children of union members.' Looking on is U.S. Attorney Michael J.
Garcia, whose office will prosecute the case.
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City
Investigation Commissioner Rose Gill Hearn was no less caustic, saying that
among the tainted fruits of Mr. McLaughlin's alleged corruption were "a
Mercedes-Benz, envelopes stuffed with cash, union workers used like personal
servants." She accused him of the "theft of enormous amounts of money from the
various people he was elected to serve."
Pondered Mayoral Run
Mr. McLaughlin in the past was credited with reviving the CLC after it grew
moribund under his predecessor, Thomas van Arsdale, whose father, Harry, had
made it a dynamic force in municipal life during the 1960s and 1970s. He became
the face of organized labor in the city after he took the CLC reins in 1995,
even as he served in the Assembly, and at one point later in the decade
seriously considered running for Mayor.
According to the indictment, however, Mr. McLaughlin's ascension to power
coincided with his engaging in multiple acts of racketeering that included
taking part in a bid-rigging scheme involving the contracts to repair and
maintain city street-lights, accepting payoffs to allow contractors to use
nonunion labor, and generating other sources of cash for himself from both his
union jobs and his Assembly post.
This allowed him, according to prosecutors, to finance a lifestyle that was
in a different universe from the employees for whom he was advocating.
Country-Club Lifestyle
It included a luxurious home in Nissequogue, L.I. - allegedly renovated by
union subordinates - and residences in Queens and Albany; a country-club
membership which had an initiation fee of nearly $25,000; marina fees for his
boat; school tuition for one of his children; the tab for his son's wedding; and
the Mercedes for his wife and other cars for himself, his son, and a person
described in the indictment as a female friend. He was accused of giving money
under questionable circumstances to, or arranging jobs for, three different
women whom the indictment described as friends. Mr. McLaughlin is an electrician
who early on became a protégé of Harry van Arsdale and later served as Tom van
Arsdale's top aide at the CLC. Even as he headed the umbrella group for
organized labor in the city and performed his Assembly duties, he remained the
business representative for the J Division of Local 3 of the International
Brotherhood of Electrical Workers.
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| DENIS M.
HUGHES: Trying to repair damage.
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The indictment
accuses him of enlisting four unidentified corrupt associates, one of them a
relative, in his schemes and giving them ranking positions in the J Division as
well as in either his Assembly office, the athletic association that ran the
Electchester Little League, or a CLC panel known as the Commission on the
Dignity of Immigrants.
Harpoons His Image
It spells out in unusually graphic detail alleged behavior that, if true,
would harpoon Mr. McLaughlin's public image as a devoted family man who was
particularly attuned to the needs of young people and immigrants in his Assembly
district.
In August 2005, it charges, Mr. McLaughlin chose as the head of the immigrant
commission a foreman in the J Division to whom he was related, even though the
man "had no training or professional experience relating to immigration issues."
This official was already working as a full-time supervisor for a
street-lighting contractor, had a private practice as a chiropractor, was a
consultant and event planner for the CLC, and served as a part-time aide in Mr.
McLaughlin's Assembly office in Queens. When the foreman told Mr. McLaughlin
that he didn't have time for the immigrant panel duties, he allegedly responded
that it wouldn't require much time.
The indictment alleges that after instructing the man to set up a special
bank account to which his checks from the CLC for that work could be
transmitted, and securing a pay raise for the position, Mr. McLaughlin had the
relative sign over $55,000 in checks from the account to him, using the money
for expenditures including mortgage and rental payments, credit-card bills, and
country-club dues.
In June 2004, Mr. McLaughlin is alleged to have met with one of his corrupt
confederates and told him he wanted $6,000 from a special account set up in the
name of the Little League in order to pay the rent on his Albany apartment for
the rest of the year. He was told in response, according to the indictment, that
another confederate had already spent $2,800 "for softball and other expenses
and was not willing to part with the remaining funds in the account."
'That's My Money'
The indictment quotes Mr. McLaughlin saying in response to tell the other
associate that "all that f------ money he's f------ spending on other stuff,
that ain't his money ... that's mine." He then told the man to generate
additional money by asking street-lighting contractors and the CLC to write
checks to the Little League.
The allegations of that kind of personal behavior, as well as the scope of
the crimes imputed to Mr. McLaughlin, combined to shock several prominent labor
officials who dealt extensively with him, including United Federation of
Teachers President Randi Weingarten.
"It was a tragic day," she said Oct. 19 of his indictment two days earlier.
"I worked with this guy for a long time, and I was stunned. If the charges are
true, it's a real betrayal. But there's a presumption of innocence that operates
in this country."
Allege CLC Out $185G
According to prosecutors, Mr. McLaughlin improperly received $185,000 from
the CLC, using a variety of corrupt schemes. It was hardly his biggest victim,
they noted: he is accused of illicitly obtaining $1.4 million from
street-lighting contractors - and allegedly had a secret interest in one firm -
and other industry companies; $330,000 from his own campaign committee; $140,000
from the J Division of Local 3, $95,000 from the Little League - which was
described as constantly scrambling to make ends meet - and $35,000 from the
Assembly.
DOI Commissioner Hearn announced Oct. 19 that her agency has for months
deployed monitors to ensure that there is no further bid-rigging among vendors
holding street-light contracts with the Department of Transportation, with the
vendors paying the costs. No contractors have been charged yet in connection
with the scheme.
Mr. Hughes said the CLC had set up a constitutional committee to examine the
400-union organization's constitution and governance system, with an eye toward
reducing the power of whoever is president.
In his opinion, Mr. Hughes said, "The best play would be to move the
president to a part-time position" and rotate the job among prominent labor
leaders. For the moment, he will serve as acting CLC president. Such a shift in
the function of that post would mean continuing to increase the power vested
with the position of executive director. That job was recently created for Ed
Ott, a veteran CLC staffer who has assumed many of Mr. McLaughlin's old duties
over the past eight months.
No Commitment Yet
Asked whether Mr. Ott would be given that role on a more permanent basis, Mr.
Hughes replied, "Ed is a very capable guy, and he's doing a great job now, but
we haven't really gotten into that yet." Among the matters the CLC is grappling
with, he said, is developing a long-term strategic plan for how it deals with
its member unions.
An essential component of that plan, Mr. Hughes noted, is to rehabilitate an
image that was tarnished by the charges against Mr. McLaughlin, which triggered
frontpage headlines of "Boss Hog" in the New York Post and "King of Greed" in
the Daily News.
"It's going to be very hard, and we have our work cut out for us," Mr. Hughes
said. "But we're going to do our jobs until we get it straight."