Feds indict labor leader
August 5, 1999
BY CAM SIMPSON FEDERAL COURT
REPORTER
A top Chicago union boss with political clout and mob ties got $5
million in kinky loans and shared in almost $334,000 in cash kickbacks
after directing union funds to favored banks and investors, a federal
indictment charged Wednesday.
John Serpico, 68, of Lincolnwood faces charges of racketeering, fraud
and money laundering for allegedly running a Chicago union group and a
separate international union as if they were his personal fiefdoms for at
least 12 years.
Serpico is the chairman of the Illinois International Port Authority, a
position he has maintained under four Illinois governors despite his
connections to top Chicago mobsters.
He also has doled out hundreds of thousands of dollars in union
campaign contributions to former governors James R. Thompson and Jim
Edgar, current Gov. Ryan, Mayor Daley and other politicians. Ryan is
weighing Serpico's reappointment to the port authority, the sprawling
South Side industrial harbor, a spokesman for the governor said Wednesday.
Indicted with Serpico were longtime friends and associates Gilbert
Cataldo, 59, who is Chicago's former housing director, and Maria Busillo,
53, who held numerous union positions under Serpico.
Serpico has held at least 15 top positions in eight unions or labor
groups since 1975. He was a top vice president for the Laborers'
International Union of North America until being ousted in 1995 because of
mob ties that surfaced in congressional testimony as early as 1985.
Most of Serpico's clout, however, stems from his
control of the Chicago-based Central States Joint Board, an umbrella group
for eight small unions with as many as 20,000 members. He was its
president from 1975 to 1994, and now serves as president emeritus and
"consultant." From 1975 to 1985, Serpico also was the secretary-treasurer
of the International Union of Allied Novelty and Production Workers, which
has had as many as 30,000 members.
The Central States Joint Board and novelty workers
union are at the center of Serpico's troubles. Through his positions with
them, Serpico controlled tens of millions of dollars from union pension
plans, health and welfare funds and union operating cash.
The indictment alleges Serpico and Busillo directed massive deposits to
Capitol Bank & Trust and Gladstone-Norwood Bank in exchange for nine
personal and business loans totaling about $5 million. The loans were
handed out with sweet terms that normal customers couldn't touch, the
indictment charges. Many were totally unsecured. Some had easy payment
plans. Others allegedly were made to cover interest payments on already
existing loans.
One loan was allegedly used to finance a film studio
involving Serpico, an alleged organized crime figure and former
U.S. Rep. Morgan Murphy, who left Congress in 1981. Others allegedly were
used to buy apartment buildings, a condo in Marco Island, Fla., and to
finance a building to house illegal aliens for the government.
Capitol Bank & Trust issued eight of the nine loans and pleaded
guilty in 1996 for its role, paying an $800,000 fine. Its plea agreement
detailed more than $20 million in union deposits and investments.
Separately, Serpico is accused of channeling a $6.5
million loan from the union to a hotel and office development in Downstate
Champaign. Cataldo and Serpico shared in almost $334,000 in cash kickbacks
paid out for the loan, the indictment charges. The hotel complex was
developed by a Chicago company headed by one of Cataldo's relatives, who
has not been charged.
Attorneys for all of the defendants either declined comment or did not
return calls. Serpico also did not return calls.
Through the Central States Joint Board, Serpico has given at least
$137,150 to the campaigns of Ryan, Edgar and funds controlled by House
Speaker Michael Madigan (D-Chicago) since 1994. Thompson received at least
$82,000 while in office and Daley has received at least $86,600, records
show.
Contributing: Robert Manor, Dave
McKinney |