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The Clintons and the Mob
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The Laborers'
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International Union of North America represents 750,000 construction and
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waste-removal workers. Their leader is named Arthur A. Coia . Coia is a
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major contributor to Democratic causes, and also has had extensive social
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dealings with the Clintons. Early last year, the Justice Department allowed
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Coia to oversee a massive cleanup of his union, rather than filing a
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racketeering lawsuit, removing Coia, and putting the union under government
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control.
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The Laborers' ties to the
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mob have been studied often, most recently in a Justice Department
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investigation begun during the Bush administration. The October 1994 report of
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that probe charged, among many other specifics, that the union's presidents,
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including Coia, "have been controlled and influenced by organized crime
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figures" for decades. Coia, whose entire career has been in the Laborers'
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union, is a wealthy man thanks in part to real-estate dealings with his own.
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His father was also a top union official who, according to federal
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investigators, had long-standing mob contacts.
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Coia's ties to the
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Clintons began in early 1993, when the Laborers loaned $100,000 to
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Clinton's inaugural committee. After Coia rose to the union presidency in March
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1993, he and his wife had numerous contacts with the Clintons. A House
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Judiciary subcommittee (which held hearings on this matter in July) has issued
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a list of more than 100 "transactions" between the two families extending
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through May of this year. These include watching an NBA game together at the
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White House, receptions, bill signings, breakfasts, dinners, gift exchanges (an
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autographed basketball for the president, the book of Psalms for Hillary) and
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an invitation (declined) from Clinton to Coia to join him on a trip to Haiti.
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The Haiti invitation was relayed by White House Deputy Chief of Staff Harold
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Ickes, a lawyer who used to represent the union.
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Coia also
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aided Clinton politically . The Laborers' PAC contributed more than $2
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million to the Democratic Party and its candidates in 1993 and 1994. Coia broke
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with most of the labor movement to support NAFTA. Coia personally contributed
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$1,000 to the Clintons' legal defense fund, and helped organize Democratic
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Party fund-raisers. He joined the board of "Back to Business," a group of
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prominent Democrats dedicated to responding to attacks on the Clintons'
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integrity.
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In January 1994, Hillary Clinton was scheduled
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to give a satellite address to top Laborers' union officials. The chief of the
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Justice Department's organized-crime section recommended in a memo that she
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"avoid direct contact with Coia, if possible." In September 1994, the White
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House considered appointing Coia to the presidential council on
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competitiveness. It submitted his name to the FBI for a background check. The
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FBI warned that Coia "is a criminal associate of the New England Patriarca
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organized crime family" and was under confidential investigation. The
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appointment was dropped. Two weeks later, however, Coia met with Clinton in the
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Oval Office to "share some thoughts and ideas," according to his thank-you
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note. The next month, Coia and his wife attended a White House dinner at which
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the president played the saxophone.
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On Nov.
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4, 1994, Coia received a handwritten note from Clinton thanking him for a "gorgeous"
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custom-made golf club and congratulating him on becoming a grandfather. The
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same day, Coia received a copy of the Justice Department's report concluding
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that he was "controlled and influenced" by the mob. In February 1995, a week
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after Hillary Clinton addressed a Laborers' conference in Florida (see photo),
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Coia and the Justice Department signed an agreement that gave Coia until 1998
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to clean up the union under government supervision rather than placing the
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union under direct federal control.
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This agreement is central to the controversy. Did
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Coia get special treatment because of his Clinton connection? In more
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than 15 other racketeering cases, the government filed the case in court and
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ultimately took over control of the union. Defenders of the Laborers'
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arrangement argue that it will clean up the union just as effectively, and at
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less expense. Back in 1987, Newt Gingrich and other Republicans were among 245
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House members who wrote a letter to Attorney General Ed Meese specifically
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opposing a federal takeover of four unions including the Laborers, and
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protesting the use of federal racketeering laws against the unions.
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Since the agreement, Coia has
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hired 50 former FBI agents and several former federal prosecutors to pursue the
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internal reform. So far, that effort has ousted 27 union members, put four
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local unions under a central trusteeship, and overturned four tainted local
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elections. Federal field agents and prosecutors nevertheless have been quoted
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(anonymously) saying that the union is still mobbed up. They say the government
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has made a sweetheart deal that is simply allowing Coia to purge his
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rivals.
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At the subcommittee hearing,
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the key Justice Department officials testified that the White House was not
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involved in the settlement with the Laborers in any way. No direct evidence to
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the contrary was produced. Democrats note that the Republican Party has
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had plenty of contacts with disreputable unions . Ronald Reagan gladly
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took endorsements from the Longshoremen and the Teamsters, two unions that were
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the targets of FBI racketeering probes at the time.
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