From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
|
Jackie Presser |

Jackie Presser |
| Born |
August 6, 1926(1926-08-06)
Cleveland, Ohio, U.S. |
| Died |
July 9, 1988 (aged 61)
Cleveland, Ohio, U.S. |
| Occupation |
Union leader |
| Spouse(s) |
Pat Presser (died)
Carmen Presser (divorced, 1983) |
| Children |
Bari Presser and Gary Presser (first
marriage) |
| Parents |
William (Bill) Presser |
Jackie Presser (August 6, 1926 – July 9, 1988)
was an American
labor leader and president of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters from
1983 until his death in 1988. He was closely connected to organized
crime, and allegedly became president of the Teamsters based on
the approval and support of the Cleveland mafia. From 1972 until
his death, he was also an informant for the Federal Bureau of
Investigation concerning mafia influence in the Teamsters
union.
Early
life
Presser was born in Cleveland, Ohio, in
1926. His grandfather, a Jewish
immigrant from Austria,
became a garment worker, and was active in and participated in
several strikes led by various garment makers' unions in New York City.
Presser's father, William (Bill) Presser, was at the time of
Jackie's birth a Teamster organizer. The Pressers were very poor:
Bill Presser stuffed newspapers into shoes to block holes in the
uppers and strengthen worn-out soles. The family often moved into
an apartment at the beginning of the month and out again at the end
of the month because the Pressers could not afford the rent.[1]
Bill Presser, however, was a protege of Jimmy Hoffa and quickly rose within the
local, regional and international Teamsters ranks. He was elected
president of the Ohio Conference of Teamsters and eventually a vice
president of the international union.[1]
Bill Presser was also intimately connected with the Cleveland
mob.[2][3][4]
Presser's childhood was by his own account a happy one. However,
he was deeply influenced by his family's poverty, and by the anti-semitic prejudice he often
encountered.[4]
Presser dropped out of school in the middle of the eighth grade.
Using his father's connections, he got a job delivering juke boxes
to local restaurants and bars.[4][5]
Presser enlisted in the United States Navy in 1943 when he
was 17, and served in World War II. After the war, Presser
returned to Cleveland and got a job as a truck driver for a vending
machine company.[1][4][5]
After a year as a truck driver, Presser was hired as a union
organizer by Local 10, a Cleveland affiliate of the Hotel
Employees and Restaurant Employees Union. In 1948, Presser was
elected president of Local 10. He merged his local with four other
local unions in order to improve the workers' collective bargaining
position. He also began receiving a markedly larger salary, and
spending large amounts of money on travel and automobiles. He wore
pinky rings and diamond bracelets, and became notorious for wearing
loud, brightly colored sports jackets. He also began to gain
substantial amounts of weight, a health problem he would fight for
the rest of his life. In 1952, Presser lost re-election as union
president after members became dissatisfied with his colorful and
lavish lifestyle.[1][4][5]
Early
Teamster career
In 1952, Jackie Presser was hired as an organizer by the
international Teamsters union. He held a series of staff jobs for
the next 12 years. Presser's break came in 1964, when he and his
father brokered a real estate deal in suburban Cleveland for a
group of local investors (which included Jackie Presser). The
investors built an upscale sports club and restaurant on the
property. The Pressers also helped the investors secure a $1.1
million loan from the Teamsters' Central States Pension Fund. The
project went bankrupt,
however, and the pension fund lost more than $265,000.[1][2]
Presser also undertook a personal transformation at this time.
He stopped wearing flashy rings and loud clothing and began
expressing a taste for expensive, conservative, tailored suits. He
also undertook a series of diets in an unsuccessful attempt to lose
weight (he weighed close to 140 kg [300 pounds] for the rest of his
life).[1]
In 1966, Bill Presser gave his son Jackie a charter to form a
new Teamsters local in Cleveland. Presser organized 12 workers at a
local paint company and established Local 507. Presser hired a
number of organizers, and Local 507 quickly organized 6,000 workers
in dozens of plants and warehouses in the Cleveland area -— making
Local 507 the largest Teamster local in the metropolitan area.[1][4][6]
Bill and Jackie Presser soon were some of the most powerful men
in the Teamsters union. By 1972, the father-son combination led the
Ohio Conference of Teamsters. Jackie Presser quickly helped make
the Ohio Conference a model within the Teamsters for providing
social services, engaging in union-member communications, and
undertaking effective political activity. Both Pressers were also
trustees of the Teamster's Central States Pension Fund, one of the
richest and most influential pension plans in the nation.[7]
Jackie Presser was elected an international vice president of
the Teamsters in 1976. His father, Bill Presser, was forced to
resign his vice presidency after he was convicted of extortion and obstruction of justice.
According to court testimony, Bill Presser and the Cleveland mob
agreed to nominate Jackie as Bill Presser's successor. Bill Presser
met with Roy
Lee Williams, then president of the Central Conference of
Teamsters -— a regional council which controlled union locals in 14
Midwestern states (including Ohio). Williams, who was working with
the Kansas City crime family,
agreed to help Presser convince Teamster President Fitzsimmons to
make Jackie a vice president. Jackie Presser's subsequent election
was unanimous.[1][6][8][9][10]
As an international vice president, Presser urged the Teamsters
to root out corruption and pushed for a massive public relations
campaign to improve the union's image. In 1977, the Teamsters built
a large public relations operation at its headquarters in Washington,
D.C. Presser soon won authorization for a $250,000-a-year
advertising campaign, and the union began sponsoring football games
on the radio.[1][4]
But that same year Presser, along with Fitzsimmons and 17 other
Teamster leaders, was forced to resign as a trustee of the Central
States Pension Fund. The Department of Justice had charged Presser
and others with making improper loans to mob-controlled Las Vegas casinos,
racetracks and real estate investments. In 1978, Presser was named
a defendant in a civil suit brought by the U.S. Department of
Labor (DOL), which sought damages and reimbursement on behalf
of union retirees.[7][11]
By 1979, Presser was making $231,676 a year. He drew a salary as
both secretary-treasurer of Local 507 and as an international vice
president of the union.[12]
Becoming an FBI
informant
Jackie Presser, along with his father and Teamsters President Frank
Fitzsimmons, became informers for the federal government in
1972. Bill Presser had been indicted by the federal government on
bribery, embezzlement and other charges. Jimmy Hoffa, meanwhile, had been released
from federal prison and was seeking to regain the presidency of the
Teamsters. The three men offered the Internal Revenue Service (IRS)
incriminating evidence about Hoffa and other rivals in the
Teamsters union. The Pressers agreed to supply their evidence if
the U.S. Department of
Justice (DOJ) would drop its indictment against the senior
Presser. Unbeknownst to Fitzsimmons, the Pressers told the IRS that
they had evidence of illegal activities by Fitzsimmons as well. The
IRS was not receptive to the offers, and DOJ refused to drop its
indictment of Bill Presser (some charges were eventually dropped,
and Bill Presser was found innocent of others). Angry at the
government's refusal, Fitzsimmons allegedly contacted White
House chief counsel Charles Colson
(who was the Nixon administration's liaison to labor groups) and
sought a meeting with President Richard Nixon.
Embarrassed, IRS and Federal Bureau of
Investigation (FBI) agents subsequently interviewed Jackie
Presser in late 1972. Presser's information was verified, and
Presser spent the rest of his life as an FBI informer.[13]
Presser began receiving $2,500 a month (roughly $12,500 in 2007
dollars) from the FBI for providing information. Presser was
considered a "top-echelon informant," marking him as one of the
Bureau's most prized sources.[14]
Shortly thereafter, Presser allegedly received permission from
two FBI agents to pad the Local 507 payroll with fake employees.
The individuals hired as "ghost employees" were not required to do
any work but nevertheless received substantial paychecks. The
paychecks, it was later claimed, were a way of funneling payments
to Teamsters officials and members of the Cleveland mob.[13]
Involvement with the
mafia
According to court records, in 1974 Jackie Presser became deeply
involved in mafia affairs. He allegedly told the leaders of the Chicago mafia
that he was willing to do them favors in exchange for money and
assistance. Jimmy "The Weasel" Fratianno, a former
hitman in
the Cleveland crime family and later
acting head of the Los Angeles crime family,
later testified that Chicago crime boss Joseph Aiuppa told him in 1974 that "if
you need anything from Jackie Presser, he said he'll do it for
you." Fratianno also testified that he colluded with Presser to set
up a union dental program whose profits were skimmed into Presser's
and the Mafia's bank accounts.
Organizationally, however, Presser was under the control of the
Cleveland crime family.[15][16]
Presser's involvement with organized crime eventually led to
fears for his safety. In 1976, a battle for control inside the
Cleveland mafia broke out. Longtime Cleveland mob boss John T. Scalish
died without naming a successor. John Nardi, a high-ranking Teamster leader,
formed a coalition with mobster Danny Greene to seize control of the
Cleveland crime family. They were opposed by Scalish lieutenant James "Blackie"
Licavoli. Eventually Nardi and Greene were murdered by
Licavoli, along with several other Teamsters officials. Presser
feared he was next. The FBI gave Presser a small radio transmitter
that supposedly could detonate a car bomb from a distance. Presser
also hired a large contingent of muscular bodyguards who
accompanied him everywhere he went (including Teamster meetings).
Despite being armed with the radio device and surrounded by guards,
Presser fled to Florida and moved from hotel to hotel every few
days until the gang war ended.[9][17][18]
In 1977, Presser allegedly used his mob connections to seek
political favors from President Jimmy Carter. According to Fratianno's
court testimony, Presser asked Fratianno to locate someone who
could persuade Carter to put pressure on DOJ, DOL and the FBI in
criminal investigations or to secure pardons for Presser
associates. Fratianno claimed that William Marchiondo, an Albuquerque lawyer, later met
with Presser. Marchiondo was an associate of former New Mexico Governor Jerry Apodaca, and
Fratianno believed that Marchiondo and Apodaca felt they had
Carter's ear because they had supported the president's candidacy
early in the 1976 primary season.[19]
Reagan transition
controversy
In 1980, Ronald
Reagan forged a close political relationship with Jackie
Presser. During Reagan's 1980 campaign for president, Jackie
Presser served as one of Reagan's hosts at a private luncheon for
Teamster and other union leaders and escorted Reagan to private
meetings with Teamster officials.[20] After
the November 1980 presidential election, Reagan named Presser as a
labor advisor to his transition team. The media soon reported that
Presser was reputed to have links to organized crime and that he
was the object of a DOL civil suit for financial malfeasance.
Reagan and his advisors claimed to have been unaware of the
accusations, and Presser denied having any ties to organized
crime.[15][21] Just
days after the story broke in the national press, however, New
Jersey State Police witnesses testified that Presser was the
primary contact for the DeCavalcante crime family of
New Jersey and the Patriarca crime family of Boston whenever crime figures needed loans
from Teamster pension funds.[22] The
courtroom testimony intensified the pressure on the Reagan
transition team.
Democrats and leaders of the Teamsters for a Democratic
Union (TDU), a Teamster reform group, demanded that Reagan
remove Presser from the transition team. But Reagan aides said that
the transition team had completed its task and the issue was now
moot.[23]
Teamster career,
1980-1983
The U.S. Department of Labor began investigating Presser in 1981
after receiving allegations he had padded the Local 507 payroll
with "ghost employees." A secret affidavit outlining the
government's actions and preliminary findings was filed with a
federal court in 1982.[24]
On April 15, 1981, Frank Fitzsimmons announced he was stepping
down as president of the Teamsters due to worsening health. Roy
Williams and Jackie Presser were mentioned as possible successors,
and some press reports indicated a fight for the presidency was
under way. But Presser announced he would not be a candidate and
that he was supporting Williams instead.[25]
Williams was opposed by Pete Camarata—a dock worker from Detroit, Michigan, and co-founder of the Teamsters for a Democratic
Union (TDU). When TDU activists picketed the Teamster
convention at which Williams was elected, Presser declared the
picketers "an ever-changing cast of union drop-outs, college
students, aimless transients and an elite group of zealots who
clearly have the clout over the sign carriers" and declared them to
be under the control of "Marxist leaders from the International
Socialist Party." He also repeatedly referred to Camarata as
"Commie-Rat-A."[26]
Camarata accused Presser of hiring a "squad of thugs" to intimidate
delegates and provoke violence—allegations which would later prove
accurate.[27]
During the convention, Presser was asked whether he supported
the reaffiliation of the union with the AFL-CIO. He told the press
that his attitude was "very negative" toward reaffiliation.[28]
In mid-June, Bill Presser died of a heart attack.[29]
Jackie Presser, who was re-elected as an international vice
president at the June convention, later reported that he earned
$353,737 in 1981 from his various Teamster jobs.[30] In
1982, he made $394,895.[31]
First
official confirmation as government informant
Although turncoat mob leaders and others had long accused Jackie
Presser of being a government informant, the first official
confirmation did not come until August 22, 1981. In its August 31
issue, Time magazine reported that Fitzsimmons, Bill
Presser and Jackie Presser had all served as government informants
in the early 1970s to avoid possible prosecution. The information
was revealed in declassified reports filed by IRS agents. Presser
confirmed that he, his father and Fitzsimmons had met with federal
agents, but declared that there had been only one meeting in
1972.[32]
Days later, the Cleveland Plain Dealer newspaper
reported that court documents and unidentified law enforcement
officials had confirmed that Presser and his father had served as
government informants while taking $300,000 in kickbacks from a Las Vegas public relations
firm connected to organized crime. Presser categorically denied the
report.[33]
Soon after, however, editors at the Plain Dealer
retracted the story despite protests from reporters. The mafia had
long doubted claims that Presser was an informant, and the
retraction helped renew mob confidence in Presser.[34] The
mob's confidence in Presser was reaffirmed a year later when the
Justice Department publicly ended its investigation into the
alleged kickback scheme.[35]
Bid for
presidency
In February 1983, Presser was re-elected to the international
union's policy committee.[36]
Just two months later, Roy Williams was convicted for conspiring
to bribe U.S. Senator
Howard Cannon.
Williams announced he would resign as Teamsters president while
appealing his conviction.[37]
Williams' conviction was no surprise to Presser. Beginning in
1979, Presser began providing the Justice Department with extensive
information on Williams. It was Presser who had turned over the
critical evidence which showed Williams had arranged to give Sen.
Cannon a parcel of land as a bribe to defeat trucking deregulation
legislation.[3]
Press reports at the time claimed that a ferocious fight erupted
over Williams' successor. Williams' resignation came just 15 days
before the Teamster convention, at which a successor would have to
be elected. In addition to Presser, other candidates for the
presidency were reported to be M.E. (Andy) Anderson, president of
the statewide Teamsters organization in California; Joseph Morgan, president of the
Teamsters in Florida; Don
Peters, president of the large Teamsters local in Chicago; and Ray Schoessling,
secretary-treasurer of the international Teamsters union and a
Williams appointee.[38] The
press reported that Presser had formed an alliance with Anderson,
which gave him enough votes to win the presidency.[8][39]
In fact, no internal fight existed. Instead, mafia families in
Chicago, Cleveland and various cities on the East Coast had met
shortly after Williams' resignation announcement and picked Presser
to lead the Teamsters. Initially, organized crime figures did not
prefer Presser. But mob leaders Angelo Lonardo, Anthony "Fat Tony"
Salerno, and Milton "Maishe" Rockman (Scalish's brother-in-law)
met with mafia officials throughout the country to build support
for a Presser presidency. The final decision was made at a meeting
in a Chicago hotel attended by Jackie Cerone, Aiuppa, Lonardo and
Rockman. Presser himself informed the FBI shortly after the mob
meeting that he "had the support of all the East Coast families"
and that he would be the next Teamsters' president.[3][40]
Jackie Presser was elected president of the Teamsters on April
21, 1983. He pledged to re-invigorate the union, organize new
members, and end trucking deregulation. He also said he had no
opinion as to whether the Teamsters should rejoin the AFL-CIO.[7][41]
Shortly after his election, Presser told his FBI contacts that
anyone who sought to do business with him needed to go through the
mafia first.[3]
Presser's biggest opponent within the Teamsters was actually William J.
McCarthy, president of Joint Council 10 (which covered all
Teamster locals in New
England). In an attempt to discredit McCarthy, Presser told the
FBI that McCarthy had sought the support of organized crime in an
unsuccessful attempt to persuade Presser to appoint him
secretary-treasurer in 1983.[42]
Reports later showed that Presser was paid more than a half
million dollars in salary in 1983 (the year of his election to the
presidency). He received $216,000 as secretary-treasurer and
executive officer of Local 507; $42,500 as vice chairman of the
Ohio Conference of Teamsters; and $59,500 as president of Teamsters
Joint Council 41 in Ohio. His presidential salary was $216,000 a
year.[43]
Major presidential
milestones
On May 5, 1983, the U.S. Department of Labor settled a portion
of its case against the former trustees of the Central States
Pension Fund. Several insurance companies agreed to pay more than
$6.75 million to the fund. Presser was not involved in the
settlement, and the civil suit against him continued.[44] But
the same day DOL claimed victory against pension fund graft,
Presser told FBI agents that organized crime still controlled the
pension fund.[3]
In 1984, Presser and the remaining trustees settled their personal
liability suit for $2 million.[45]
Three years later, the U.S. Department of Labor settled its
final civil case against Presser and the other Central States
Pension Fund trustees. The agreement, which included Presser,
turned operation of the pension fund over to a federal court until
the year 2007. In addition, Presser and the other 17 trustees paid
an additional $175,000 to reimburse the fund for certain other
costs. It was the first time the Labor Department won restitution
from individual pension fund trustees under the Employee Retirement
Income Security Act (ERISA).[46]
Presser quickly established his control over the Teamsters
during his first six months in office. He appointed Robert Holmes,
a Detroit Teamster leader, as director of the
Central Conference of Teamsters; Paul Locigno, a Teamster staffer
from Ohio, as director of government affairs; Wallace Clements, a
staff political coordinator in the Deep South, as political director; and Vicki
Saporta, a longtime organizer, as organizing director. Presser also
strengthened the union's research and lobbying shops and
established the Titan System, a computer networking system which
established email communication throughout the union for the first
time.[47] He
also began a major lobbying effort, particularly against a proposed
labor racketeering bill.[48]
In October 1983, the TDU announced a slate of candidates to try
to oust Presser.[49]
On November 8, 1983, Presser underwent triple bypass heart
surgery in Cleveland.[50]
By the end of 1983, Presser was making $755,474 a year.[51]
On October 24, 1984, Presser named Weldon Mathis secretary-treasurer of the
Teamsters. Mathis replaced Ray Schoessling, who retired effective
January 1, 1986.[52]
In 1984, Presser received more than $530,000 in pay. Presser was
paid $224,000 in salary by Local 507, $59,500 by Teamsters Joint
Council 41, $18,100 by the Ohio Conference of Teamsters, and
$229,000 by the international union.[53]
In April 1986, as Presser's legal woes worsened, C. Sam Theodus,
leader of Teamster Local 407 in Cleveland, announced he would run
as the TDU candidate against Presser. Presser's legal problems,
however, seemed unlikely to harm his chances for re-election.[54]
At the regularly scheduled Teamsters convention in May 1986,
Presser was elected to a full five-year term as Teamsters
president. Presser arrived in the ballroom accompanied by composer
Aaron Copland's
Fanfare for the Common
Man. Four muscular men dressed as Roman centurions bearing him on a golden sedan chair.
Despite being indicted days before on embezzlement and racketeering
charges, Presser received 1,729 votes to Theodus' 24 votes. Theodus
conceded after the first hour of balloting, but Presser ordered the
roll call to continue to the end (it lasted another
three-and-a-half hours) to humiliate Theodus. After the balloting,
delegates defeated proposals to cut the president's salary by
$100,000 and to prohibit national leaders from collecting multiple
union salaries.[55]
A month later, the press reported that Presser had received a
total income of $588,353 from his four union positions.[56]
In October 1987, Presser led the Teamsters back in to the
AFL-CIO. Presser had repeatedly said he was uninterested in
reaffiliation, and AFL-CIO President Lane Kirkland had been deeply
angered by Presser's attempt to merge with the ITU and to raid
AFL-CIO affiliated unions with members in the publishing
industry.[57] But
as Presser's legal problems mounted and a federal takeover of the
union appeared more and more likely, Presser sought reaffiliation
as a means of shielding the Teamsters from the government. In
August and September 1987, leaders of the AFL-CIO and the Teamsters
secretly worked out a tentative reaffiliation agreement—exactly 30
years after the Teamsters were first expelled for corruption.
Pushing reaffiliation on the AFL-CIO side were Robert
Georgine, president of the Building
and Construction Trades Department, AFL-CIO, and William H.
Wynn, president of the United Food and
Commercial Workers.[17][58] Law
enforcement officials said the reaffiliation undercut their effort
to put the Teamsters under federal control.[59]
Attempted merger with
ITU
A month after his election, Presser proposed a merger of the
Teamsters and the International
Typographical Union (ITU), a 70,000-member printers' union.[60]
AFL-CIO President Lane Kirkland, however, opposed the
merger because the Teamsters were not members of the labor
federation.[61] The
Teamsters and Typographers went ahead with their merger talks
anyway, even as Kirkland supported an ITU group opposed to the
merger.[62] After
nearly a year, merger seemed imminent despite a lawsuit by a small
group of ITU members opposing the merger. But in the election for
ITU officers held just days prior to the merger vote, the incumbent
ITU president Joe Bingel and executive council leadership was
ousted from office and an anti-merger slate elected. The merger
referendum did not pass.[63]
Presser continued to push merger with the Typographers, even as
the new ITU president Robert Mc Michen and executive council
leadership signed a merger agreement with the Graphic
Communications International Union (GCIU).[64] That
effort collapsed in March 1985 after ITU members rejected merger
with the GCIU. Again Presser reached a merger agreement with the
ITU, and once more Kirkland went on the offensive against the
merger. But in August 1985, ITU members once more rejected merger
with the Teamsters.[65]
In July 1986, the ITU finally agreed to a merger with the Communications Workers of
America. That merger was approved in November 1986, ending
Presser's attempt to woo the ITU.[66] The
ITU ceased to exist. The printer locals joined the CWA and the
mailer locals joined the IBT.
Second
Reagan endorsement
The Teamsters had endorsed Ronald Reagan for president in 1980,
creating a furor within the American labor movement. However,
AFL-CIO officials expressed hope that the Teamsters would endorse
the Democratic candidate
in 1984. This hope proved wrong.
Presser announced on June 7, 1983, that he intended to endorse
Reagan for re-election. A formal endorsement did not come in
January 1984 as expected, and Presser strongly criticized the
AFL-CIO for endorsing Democratic candidate Walter Mondale
too early in the primary cycle.[67]
Worried Republicans waited
throughout the spring and summer for a Teamster endorsement, but it
was not forthcoming. In early August, Presser finally told White
House aides that Teamster support for Reagan hinged on whether
Reagan would remove Donald Dotson as chairman of the National Labor Relations
Board. The Dotson-led labor board had issued a string of
decisions which the Teamsters considered anti-labor. On the eve of
the Republican National Convention, Presser told the press that
Dotson's removal was a "do-or-die situation" for the
Teamsters—which held more NLRB-supervised organizing elections than
any other union. Reagan refused to fire Dotson, although
presidential aides said that a compromise would be reached over the
NLRB's actions.[68]
Just a week later, the Teamsters endorsed Reagan. Vice President George H. W.
Bush accepted the endorsement in person. The Teamster
endorsement was the only large labor union endorsement Reagan
received. In apparent gratitude, Reagan named Presser to the second
Reagan transition team as a labor advisor.[69][70]
Collective bargaining
achievements
Trucking: Deregulation had led to intense
competition in the trucking industry, and many union trucking firms
were nearing bankruptcy or were in financial difficulty. In January
1983, the employer organization which governed collective
bargaining activities in the trucking industry asked the Teamsters
to re-open its contract and approve significant wage reductions.
Presser agreed to do both, so long as laid-off union members were
given preference in re-hiring. The employers agreed. The agreement
was announced on August 16, 1983. But in a surprise vote, Teamster
members rejected the new wage agreement 94,086 to 13,082—easily
reaching the two-thirds majority necessarily to reject a contract
under the Teamster constitution. The results were a serious blow to
Presser's prestige and power in the union.[71]
Trucking industry talks began again in January 1985. Presser
pushed for limits on the use of non-union subcontractors and
subsidiaries, as well as wage and pension increases. Employers
pushed for the establishment of a two-tier wage scale that would set
permanently lower salaries for new drivers.[72]
Negotiators reached a new contract on April 1, 1985, as the old
agreement expired. Teamsters officials initially claimed the
settlement retained a single wage scale. In fact the agreement
created a two-tier pay system, with new workers receiving wages 30
percent lower than incumbent drivers. The agreement also eliminated
cost-of-living increases and significantly lower wages for
temporary workers. The total wage and benefit package provided an
increase of 10 percent over three years, the lowest increase since
a national agreement had first been established in 1964. Presser
and other Teamster leaders were forced to lobby hard for passage of
the agreement. After a month-long ratification battle, Teamsters
members narrowly ratified the contract by a 53.2 percent
majority.[73]
A third trucking industry contract was settled in May 1988. By
this time, however, Presser was too ill to participate actively in
any of the negotiating sessions. The new collective bargaining
agreement was reached on March 30, 1988. Teamster members cast 63.5
percent of all ballots against the pact. But since the "no" vote
did not meet the two-thirds majority required to overturn a
contract and authorize a strike, Presser ordered national union
officials to impose the pact.[74]
Package delivery: The Teamsters' contract with
United Parcel Service (UPS)
expired on June 1, 1985. Presser sought a two-year replacement
agreement that would provide a wage increase. Presser opened
contract talks nearly a year early, and won a moderate wage
increase. But four Teamster members sued to prevent a vote on the
contract, arguing Presser had given members no time to study or
debate the proposal. A federal judge agreed and impounded the
ballots on September 19. Undeterred, Presser once more lobbied hard
for the a new contract. A second vote was held, and 70 percent of
voters approved the pact.[75]
In 1987, Presser renegotiated the 1985 contract. This time,
negotiations opened late and a new agreement not reached until two
weeks after expiration of the existing pact. The tentative
agreement provided a minor wage increase—only 30 cents an hour. A
majority of UPS members voted against the collective bargaining
agreement (35,036 for approval, 36,093 against). But since the vote
fell far short of the two-thirds necessary to reject a contract,
the agreement was ratified and imposed on angry workers.[76]
Carhaul: Shortly after ratification of the UPS
pact, Presser began negotiations on behalf of Teamster truck
drivers who deliver new automobiles to dealerships (carhaulers).
The carhaul contract expired on June 1, 1985. Presser negotiated a
new agreement in mid-June which provided for a minimal wage
increase of 60 cents an hour, imposed a two-tier wage system,
reduced pay for trips of more than 1,100 miles, eliminated
cost-of-living adjustments, and provided for only half-pay for
loaded return trips. The union's 21,000 carhaul drivers and support
personnel rejected the contract by a 4-to-1 majority. Although no
strike was planned, the union was forced to strike on July 26,
1985, after employers sought additional wage and benefit
concessions during the subsequent round of negotiations. After a
19-day strike, a new contract was tentatively approved which
offered the same wage increase. However, management agreed to
remove the half-pay loaded return trip proposal. The two-tier wage
system was retained, but the wage difference between incumbents and
new hires was dramatically reduced. The employers also agreed to
let members vote on any concessionary economic proposals during the
life of the contract (under the previous agreement, only Teamster
leadership voted on these changes), and were able to make permanent
a temporary provision allowing companies to divert freight from
terminals where there have been layoffs. But the pact's initial
rejection and the snap strike were both seen as blows to Presser's
leadership.[77]
Commission on Organized
Crime
In early 1985, the President's Commission on Organized Crime
issued a sealed subpoena
ordering Presser to testify about mafia influence in the Teamsters
union. Presser filed suit to have the subpoena thrown out. In
March, a federal court refused to bar the subpoena.[78]
The Commission held its April 1985 hearings in Chicago, and
focused those sessions on organized crime involvement in labor
unions. During the hearings, Commission members charged that the
mafia controlled the Teamsters, the Laborers,
HERE and
the International
Longshoremen's Association.[79]
Former mobsters described numerous syndicate cash bribes and other
payments to Presser.[80] Other
witnesses testified that Presser had given his approval to the
Brotherhood of Loyal Americans and Strong Teamsters (BLAST), a
group set up to intimidate TDU members. Testimony before the panel
indicated that Presser ordered BLAST members—including regional and
local Teamster leaders and staff—to disrupt TDU meetings during the
1983 Teamster national convention. BLAST members drove speakers
from podiums, tore down banners, seized and threw away literature,
beat TDU members and ejected them from the convention hall.[81][82] "We
should be doing more of that. I'm going to tell you, I'm not going
to let up on these people," one witness quoted Presser.[81]
During his own testimony, Presser invoked his Fifth
Amendment right against self-incrimination 15 times.[81][83][84]
Presser's silence angered the Commission's members. In October
1985, the Commission renewed its efforts to question Presser after
it was revealed that the Department of Justice had decided not to
prosecute him for padding the payroll at Local 507.[85]
In the fall of 1985, the Commission heard testimony from former
Teamsters president Roy Williams about Presser's connections to
organized crime. Under a grant of immunity, Williams testified
extensively about Presser's offer to fix a 1974 criminal case for
$10,000 and his desire to obtain kickbacks for helping to arrange a
1975 Teamsters pension fund loan to organized crime figures so they
could purchase a Las Vegas casino.[9][86]
In March 1986, the Commission released a preliminary report on
organized crime influence in the Teamsters. The Commission found
corruption "so pervasive" that it recommended that the federal
government seek court supervision of the union.[87]
Department of Justice lawyers immediately began preparing a civil
lawsuit to place the Teamsters under federal control.[88]
Presser vigorously opposed the Justice Department's efforts. He
planned a five-year legal, public relations, legislative and
political counter-attack to keep the Teamsters free from court
supervision, and sought and won AFL-CIO support for his proposals.
He also led a massive lobbying effort in the Congress to oppose the takeover
on cost and libertarian philosophical grounds designed to appeal to
Republicans.[89]
In May 1988, federal prosecutors cut back their effort to take
over the Teamsters after losing a criminal trial against Anthony
"Fat Tony" Salerno. Salerno and others had been accused of labor
racketeering and controlling the election of Roy Williams and
Jackie Presser as Teamsters president. The failure to convict
Salerno led prosecutors to believe that their case against the
union might be weaker than they thought.[90]
Nevertheless, an immediate trusteeship was sought to eliminate mob
influence in the union.[91]
Final
indictment and death
The 1981 investigation into Presser's payroll-padding at Local
507 finally led to a decision by the U.S. Department of Justice to
prosecute Presser in June 1984.[92] Five
days later, the Los Angeles Times named Presser
as a U.S. government criminal informant. The report quoted unnamed
FBI sources, making this the first time that government officials
had confirmed the unverified accusations of mob informants and
other reports.[93]
But nearly a year passed before any prosecutorial action was
taken. During this time, the Justice Department debated whether to
protect Presser as a source or prosecute him. Finally, on May 16,
1985, top Justice Department officials ordered federal attorneys to
drop their prosecution of Presser over concerns that his extensive
cooperation with the government would be revealed.[94]
Outraged members of Congress demanded an investigation into the
handling of the politically sensitive case. Over the next year,
Senate investigators learned that FBI field agents had not kept FBI
officials fully informed of their actions, that FBI field agents
may have improperly approved illegal actions, and that FBI
officials did not keep DOJ and DOL officials fully informed of
their relationship with Presser.[95]
Presser's attorneys claimed that the FBI had given him
permission to initiate and maintain the payroll-padding scheme as a
means of shielding him from mob suspicions. Such permission, which
is permitted under FBI and DOJ rules and federal law, should bar
prosecution, Presser's lawyers argued.[96]
Federal grand juries in Cleveland and Washington, D.C., soon
opened investigations into the FBI's handling of the Presser case
as well as whether the promises made by FBI agents had been
authorized.[97]
Justice Department leaders eventually undertook a prosecution of
one of the FBI field agents who handled Presser, claiming that he
had not been authorized to give Presser permission to engage in the
payroll-padding scheme.[98]
In May 1986, federal prosecutors again indicted Jackie Presser
for fraud.[99]
Presser's declining health caused numerous delays in his trial.
He had surgery to remove two cancerous tumors in January 1987. His
cancer returned in June 1987, and he spent several months
undergoing chemotherapy and recuperating. He
underwent surgery again in the fall of 1987 to remove another
cancerous tumor. He suffered additional heart and pituitary gland
problems throughout the winter and spring of 1988.[100]
On May 4, 1988, Jackie Presser told the Teamsters executive
board that he was taking a four-month leave of absence due to his
health problems. Weldon Mathis was named the union's acting
president.[101]
Presser was diagnosed with a brain tumor 10 days later, and
underwent surgery to have the tumor removed.[102]
Presser went home, but was re-admitted to the hospital on June 27
suffering from cardiac problems, a blood clot in his lung and
pituitary gland dysfunction.[103]
Jackie Presser died in Cleveland on the evening of Saturday,
July 9, 1988. He was three weeks shy of his 62nd birthday. The
proximate cause of death was cardiac arrest, a complication of his
cancer and ongoing cardiac problems.[1]
Hours after Presser's funeral on July 12, Teamster leaders met a
nearby restaurant and agreed to support William J. McCarthy as his
successor.[3]
Other interests, personal
life
Presser and his first wife Pat had two children, a daughter Bari
(born 1953) and a son, Gary. Presser divorced his second wife,
Carmen, in 1983. The couple had two children. Presser's son, Gary,
was elected vice president of Local 507.[6]
Presser was an avid golfer. He also enjoyed fine food, and
patronized five-star restaurants.[6]
Presser was the first labor leader to be named to the Greater
Cleveland Growth Association board of directors (the city's chamber
of commerce). He also worked with the Special Olympics, and organized
tournaments for blind golfers.[5]
Cultural
references
A 1992 made-for-TV movie was produced for HBO about his time in office, called
Teamster Boss: The Jackie Presser Story, which starred Brian Dennehy and
Jeff Daniels.
Notes
- ^ a
b
c
d
e
f
g
h
i
j
Barron, "Jackie Presser Is Dead at 61," New York Times,
July 10, 1988.
- ^ a
b
Lindsey, "Nixon Plays Golf With Fitzsimmons at Resort Built With
Teamster Loans," New York Times, October 10, 1975.
- ^ a
b
c
d
e
f
Serrin, "Jackie Presser's Secret Lives Detailed In Government
Files," New York Times, March 27, 1989.
- ^ a
b
c
d
e
f
g
Yost, "Presser's Career A Parade of Sharp Changes In Fortune,"
Associated Press, May 16, 1986.
- ^ a
b
c
d
Tucker, "Presser Helped By Father In Teamsters Rise,"
Associated Press, April 21, 1983.
- ^ a
b
c
d
"Man In the News: A Blend Reflected In Light and Shadows: Jackie
Presser," New York Times, April 22, 1983.
- ^ a
b
c
"Jackie Presser: New Teamsters President," United Press
International, April 21, 1983.
- ^ a
b
Serrin, "Teamster Presidency Race Narrows," New York
Times, April 20, 1983.
- ^ a
b
c
Frantz, "Williams Points Finger at Presser," Chicago
Tribune, November 3, 1985.
- ^
Dembart, "Teamster Aide Quits Vice President Post," New York
Times, October 9, 1976.
- ^
Dobkin, "U.S. Sues to Recover Pension Fund Losses In Teamster
Plan," Associated Press, February 1, 1978.
- ^
"25 Teamster Officials Made More Than $100,000, Group Says,"
Associated Press, June 23, 1980.
- ^ a
b
Lardner, "Teamsters' Presser Led Two Lives As He Rose to the Top of
the Union," Washington Post, April 26, 1986; "Document
Says Presser Helped FBI Since '70s," United Press
International, November 26, 1987; Jackson and Ostrow, "Presser
Tipped FBI On 69 Persons, Records Show," Los Angeles
Times, December 3, 1987.
- ^ Jackson and
Ostrow, "Presser Faces Prospect of New Federal Charges," Los
Angeles Times, April 24, 1986.
- ^ a
b
Parry, "Reagan Unaware Appointee Had Reputed Crime Links,"
Associated Press, December 16, 1980.
- ^
Koziol, "Witness Tells of Presser Offer to Mob," Chicago
Tribune, December 20, 1985; Turner, "Documents Show Strong
Ties Between Organized Crime and 2 Top Teamsters," New York
Times, September 29, 1980.
- ^ a
b
Neff, Mobbed Up: Jackie Presser's High-Wire Life in the
Teamsters, the mafia, and the F.B.I., 1989.
- ^
Porrello, To Kill the Irishman: The War That Crippled the
Mafia, 2004.
- ^
Whether Presser actually used the connection with Marchiondo or
not, or whether Marchiondo and Apodaca attempted to influence
Carter, is not known. "Presser Allegedly Sought Help From Crime
Figure," United Press International, December 18,
1980.
- ^
Broder, "Reagan, Citing 'the Carter Depression,' Courts Labor,"
Washington Post, August 28, 1980.
- ^
Pound, "Union Dissidents and 2 In Congress Assail Teamster In
Reagan Group," New York Times, December 17, 1980.
- ^
"Presser Will Advise Reagan On Labor," Associated Press,
December 19, 1980; Lindsey, "Admitted Mafia Killer Asserts In Book
That Reagan Aide Is Tied to Syndicate," New York Times,
December 25, 1980.
- ^
Kronholm, "Job of Economics Team Advised By Presser Is Over, Reagan
Spokesman Says," Associated Press, December 23, 1980. In
1989, Allen Friedman, a former enforcer for the Cleveland mob,
claimed that he had delivered a suitcase "filled with money" to
Reagan aide (later Attorney General) Edwin Meese to obtain
Presser's appointment to the transition team. See Friedman and
Schwarz, Power and Greed: Inside the Teamsters Empire of
Corruption, 1989.
- ^
Kropko, "Labor Department Began Investigation of Teamsters Chief In
1981," Associated Press, May 16, 1986.
- ^
Shabecoff, "Fitzsimmons, Ailing, May Quit Union Job," New York
Times, April 16, 1981; "Three-Way Race Surfaces For Teamsters
President," Associated Press, May 1, 1981; Silberg,
"Fitzsimmons May Step Down," United Press International,
May 8, 1981.
- ^
Serrin, "Teamsters Open Convention With Reagan Message," New
York Times, June 2, 1981; Serrin, "Dissident Teamsters Count
Some Gains Despite Convention Losses," New York Times,
June 8, 1981.
- ^
Von Bergen, "Teamsters Open Convention," United Press
International, June 3, 1981; Serrin, "Teamster Delegates Elect
Williams. Any Objections?", New York Times, June 7,
1981.
- ^
Von Bergen, "Teamsters Push Pay Hikes and Turn Back Investigation,"
United Press International, June 3, 1981.
- ^
"William Presser Dies," United Press International, July
18, 1981.
- ^
"TDU Blasts Salaries For Top Teamsters Officials," Associated
Press, July 26, 1982.
- ^
Von Bergen, "Teamsters Officials In Big Bucks," United Press
International, July 25, 1983.
- ^
"All the President's Teamsters," Time, August 31, 1981;
"Teamsters Officials Served As Informants In 1970s," United
Press International, August 23, 1981; "Top Teamsters Informed
On 'Enemy' Union Members, Time Says," Associated Press,
August 23, 1981.
- ^
"Union Boss Denies Newspaper Charges Through Lawyer,"
Associated Press, August 24, 1981.
- ^
Friendly, "Reporters Question Story at Cleveland Plain Dealer,"
New York Times, October 17, 1982. At least one published
source later claimed that Presser complained about the accusations
to the Cleveland mafia. The crime syndicate then put pressure on
the Newhouse newspaper chain and the
executive editor of the Cleveland Plain Dealer to retract
the story. According to the paper's former executive editor, the
mob contacted lawyer Roy
Cohn, who had attended school with S.I. Newhouse, Sr. Cohn
asked Newhouse to issue the retraction. The Plain Dealer's
former executive editor has been quoted as saying he believed
Newhouse ordered the retraction because he felt he had to do so or
suffer mob retaliation. Whether Newhouse actually ordered the
retraction remains unknown, but the newspaper did retract the
story. See Neff, Mobbed Up: Jackie Presser's High-Wire Life in
the Teamsters, the Mafia, and the F.B.I., 1989.
- ^
"Justice Department Ends Investigation of Teamsters Official,"
Associated Press, October 10, 1982.
- ^
"Teamsters President Retains Policy Post," New York Times,
February 15, 1983.
- ^
Heinrich, "Convicted Teamsters Chief to Resign April 20,"
Associated Press, April 15, 1983; Franklin, "Teamster
Leader Quits to Avoid Jail," New York Times, April 16,
1983.
- ^
At the time, the position of secretary-treasurer in the Teamsters
international union was an appointed, not elected, one and the
president appointed the secretary-treasurer.
- ^
Sawyer, "Teamsters President Agrees to Resign to Avoid Jail During
Appeal," Washington Post, April 16, 1983.
- ^
Ostrow and Jackson, "Informant Alleges Mafia Ties to Presser,"
Los Angeles Times, September 24, 1985; Frantz and Koziol,
"Jailed Underboss Says Mob Haggled Over Teamsters Boss,"
Chicago Tribune, September 29, 1985; Lardner, "Mob Backed
Presser, Trial Told," Washington Post, November 27, 1985;
Doyle, "Mob Boss Accused of Rigging Presser's Election As Teamsters
Head," Associated Press, November 24, 1986; Lubasch, "Mob
Figures Chose Teamsters' Chief, Government Says," New York
Times, November 25, 1986; Drogin, "Mafia Leader Indicted Over
Presser Link," Los Angeles Times, November 25, 1986.
- ^
Serrin, "Ohio Leader Named Teamsters' Chief," New York
Times, April 22, 1983.
- ^
When the allegations were made public in 1989, federal prosecutors
claimed wiretaps on mafia figures' telephones supported Presser's
accusations. McCarthy vehemently denied the accusations. Raab, "Top
Teamster Informer Told F.B.I. That McCarthy Asked Mafia Help,"
New York Times, March 17, 1989.
- ^
Hartson, "Teamsters Leader Handsomely Compensated, Figures Show,"
Associated Press, June 18, 1984.
- ^
King, "Accord Reached On 2 Union Funds," New York Times,
May 6, 1983; Von Bergen, "Teamsters Settlement Does Not Involve
Presser," United Press International, May 6, 1983.
- ^
Hartson, "Benefit Plan Trustees Repaying $6.75 Million In
Government Settlement," Associated Press, June 15,
1984.
- ^
Swoboda, "Teamsters, U.S. Settle Pension Suit," Washington
Post, November 11, 1987; Welch, "Settlement Reached In
Teamsters' Pension Fund Case," Associated Press, November
10, 1987.
- ^
Serrin, "Teamster's Tough Road," New York Times, October
23, 1983.
- ^
"Teamster Chief Tells Senators He Opposes Racketeering Bill,"
Associated Press, June 8, 1983.
- ^
"Teamster Group Opens Drive Against Presser," Associated
Press, October 16, 1983.
- ^
"Teamster Leader Undergoes Triple Bypass Heart Surgery,"
Reuters, November 9, 1983; "Presser Prepares Concession
Proposal," Associated Press, August 3, 1983.
- ^
"The Friends of Jackie Presser," Time, September 2,
1985.
- ^
"Mathis Named to No. 2 Post In Teamsters Union," Associated
Press, October 25, 1984.
- ^
"Teamster Leader Was Paid $530,000," Associated Press, May
2, 1985.
- ^
Melvin, "Cleveland Local President to Run Against Presser,"
Associated Press, April 25, 1986; Richey, "Despite Legal
Probes, Jackie Presser Seems A Cinch For Teamster Reelection,"
Christian Science Monitor, May 12, 1986; Yancey,
"Indictment Seen As Unlikely to Harm Presser's Election,"
Associated Press, May 16, 1986.
- ^
Perl, "Presser Gets Regal Reception," Washington Post, May
21, 1986; Yancey, "Teamsters Elect Presser Overwhelmingly,"
Associated Press, May 21, 1986.
- ^
Weinstein, "116 Receive More Than $100,000," Los Angeles
Times, July 28, 1987.
- ^
Hartson, "Teamsters Leader Has Little Interest In Rejoining
AFL-CIO," Associated Press, March 25, 1984; Hartson,
"Kirkland Says He's Dropped Efforts to Take Teamsters Back,"
Associated Press, May 8, 1984.
- ^
Perl and Swoboda, "AFL-CIO Chiefs Said to Plan On Readmitting
Teamsters," Washington Post, October 23, 1987; Noble,
"Teamsters Ask to Be Allowed In A.F.L.-C.I.O.," New York
Times, October 23, 1987; Swoboda, "Unanimous AFL-CIO Council
Votes to Readmit Teamsters," Washington Post, October 25,
1987.
- ^
Noble, "Teamster Move Is Seen As Harmful to U.S. Suit," New
York Times, October 24, 1987; Weinstein, "AFL-CIO Votes to Let
Teamsters Reaffiliate," Los Angeles Times, October 25,
1987; Noble, "Kirkland Pledges to Help Teamsters Fight Any
Government Takeover," New York Times, October 27,
1987.
- ^
"Teamster Wants Merger With Printers' Union," Reuters,
July 30, 1983; "Printers Proceeding In Talks On Merger With the
Teamsters," New York Times, September 28, 1983.
- ^
Serrin, "Kirkland Opposes Teamsters Merger," New York
Times, October 7, 1983.
- ^
Von Bergen, "ITU, Teamsters In Merger Talks," United Press
International, September 28, 1983; "AFL-CIO Chief Seeks to
Thwart Merger," Associated Press, October 7, 1983;
Hartson, "ITU-Teamsters Merger Talks Continuing," Associated
Press, February 22, 1984; Hartson, "Printers Face Renewed
Threat of Expulsion From AFL-CIO," Associated Press, March
23, 1984.
- ^
Hurwitz, "Judge Asked to Block Union Merger Election,"
Associated Press, April 27, 1984; Von Bergen, "Union
Leader Beaten In Re-Election Bid," United Press
International, July 27, 1984; Hartson, "Insurgents Oust
Incumbent Leaders of Printers Union," Associated Press,
July 27, 1984; Sawyer, "ITU Members Replace Chief, Reject
Teamsters," Washington Post, July 28, 1984.
- ^
Hartson, "Presser Still Pursuing Merger With Printers Union,"
Associated Press, September 17, 1984.
- ^
Warren, "Printers Reach Accord," Chicago Tribune, January
10, 1985; Noble, "Kirkland Fights Teamster 'Raiding' In
Publishing," New York Times, June 26, 1985; Perl,
"Typographical Union Prepares to Vote On Teamsters Merger,"
Washington Post, July 8, 1985; "Typographers Reject
Teamsters Merger," Associated Press, August 28, 1985.
- ^
Warren, "Union Clearing Way for Merger With ITU," Chicago
Tribune, July 17, 1986; Warren, "Printers Union Votes to Join
Phone Workers," Chicago Tribune, November 26, 1986;
Warren, "Old Union Swallows Its Pride to Survive," Chicago
Tribune, November 30, 1986.
- ^
Von Bergen, "Teamsters Sticking With Reagan," United Press
International, June 8, 1983; Serrin, "Teamster Says Union
Prefers Reagan to Mondale," New York Times, September 26,
1983; "Teamsters Hold Off," Washington Post, January 20,
1984; "Teamster Complains About Stand On Mondale," Associated
Press, March 27, 1984.
- ^
Earley, "Support of Reagan at Issue," Washington Post,
August 22, 1984; Hartson, "Labor Relations Board Seen As Key to
Teamster Reagan Endorsement," Associated Press, August 23,
1984; Earley, "Teamsters Go Often to NLRB," Washington
Post, August 24, 1984.
- ^
Allen, "Grateful Bush Accepts Teamsters Endorsement," United
Press International, August 30, 1984; Perl and Russakoff,
"Teamsters Endorse GOP Ticket," Washington Post, August
31, 1984.
- ^ Jackson and Ostrow,
"1st Step Taken to Prosecute Teamster Chief," Los Angeles
Times, February 2, 1985.
- ^
Heath, "Presser Presides at First Teamsters Meeting,"
Associated Press, July 20, 1983; Hartson, "Rehiring
Agreement Reached," Associated Press, August 16, 1983;
King, "Teamsters Reject Concessions Plan," New York Times,
September 17, 1983; Townsend, "Teamster Vote Results Seen As Blow
to Union Leaders," Christian Science Monitor, September
21, 1983.
- ^
Perl, "Truck Labor Talks Start," Washington Post, January
16, 1985; Carmichael, "Teamsters Start Trucking Talks," United
Press International, January 16, 1985; Noble, "Trucking
Industry May Request Lower Wage Scale For Teamsters," New York
Times, January 30, 1985.
- ^
Noble, "Teamsters and Major Freight Carriers Reach A Pact As Other
Talks Go On," New York Times, April 1, 1985; Yost,
"Truckers Agree to New 3-Year Contract," Associated Press,
April 1, 1985; Noble, "Cut In Starting Pay Reported at Pan Am and
Truck Concerns," New York Times, April 2, 1985; Perl,
"Some Teamsters Find Contract Ominous," Washington Post,
April 4, 1985; Warren and Strong, "Teamsters Urge Contract OK,"
Chicago Tribune, April 4, 1985; Labaton, "Teamsters Ratify
Trucking Contract," Washington Post, May 18, 1985;
"Teamsters Accept A New Contract," Associated Press, May
18, 1985.
- ^
Yancey, "Teamsters, Trucking Lines Reach Accord On National
Contract," Associated Press, March 31, 1988; Carmichael,
"Teamsters Vote 63.5 Percent 'No' On Trucking Pact," United
Press International, May 19, 1988.
- ^
"Teamster President and Dissidents Disagree Over UPS Proposal,"
Associated Press, August 18, 1984; "Suit Charges Teamster
Chief 'Rigged' Vote," Los Angeles Times, September 1,
1984; Hartson, "Teamster Leadership Rebuffed In Seeking Contract
Ratification," Associated Press, September 20, 1984;
Kurtz, "Teamsters Criticized," Washington Post, September
21, 1984; Hartson, "Teamster Members Approve UPS Accord, Union
Says," Associated Press. October 31, 1984.
- ^
Abruzzese, "Teamsters, UPS Reach Agreement," Journal of
Commerce, July 16, 1987; Messenger, "UPS, Teamsters Agree On
Contract," Associated Press, August 21, 1987.
- ^
Perl, "Teamsters Reject New Trucking Contract," Washington
Post, July 13, 1985; "20,000 Union Members Go On Strike,"
Associated Press, July 26, 1985; "Presser Terms Union
Demands 'Heavy'," Associated Press, August 1, 1985;
Bernstein, "Car-Hauler's Strike Blow to Teamsters Chief," Los
Angeles Times, August 7, 1985; "Teamsters Approve Car Haulers
Contract," United Press International, September 13,
1985.
- ^
Seppy, "Court Rejects Presser Bid to Avoid Crime Panel Questions,"
Associated Press, April 5, 1985; "Teamster Chief Ordered
to Testify About Union," Associated Press, April 6, 1985;
Nauth and Ostrow, "Judge Orders Presser to Answer Crime Panel's
Queries," Los Angeles Times, April 6, 1985.
- ^
D'Alessio, "Chicago Hearings to Focus On Labor Racketeering,"
Associated Press, April 21, 1985; Jackson, "Teamsters Lead
Organized Crime Commission's List," Los Angeles Times,
April 23, 1985.
- ^
Klose, "Former 'Goon' Describes Labor Leasing Scheme,"
Washington Post, April 24, 1985
- ^ a
b
c
Shipp, "Teamsters' Leader Is Silent at Inquiry by Crime Panel,"
New York Times, April 24, 1985.
- ^
Ostrow and Jackson, "Presser Abetted Violence By Teamsters, Panel
Says," Los Angeles Times, November 27, 1985.
- ^ Jackson, "Teamsters
Chief Invokes Fifth to Queries On Crime Ties," Los Angeles
Times, April 24, 1985.
- ^ Koziol and O'Brien,
"Teamsters Boss Testifies In A Symphony of the 5th," Chicago
Tribune, April 24, 1985.
- ^
Ostrow and Jackson, "Crime Panel Wants to Question Presser,"
Los Angeles Times, October 1, 1985.
- ^
Frantz, "Ex-Teamster Boss Aids Presser Probe," Chicago
Tribune, October 2, 1985; Jackson and Ostrow, "Williams Says
Presser Offered to Fix Case For $10,000," Los Angeles
Times, November 5, 1985.
- ^
Noble, "Crime Panel Urges Broad U.S. Attack On the Teamsters,"
New York Times, March 7, 1986; Shenon, "Corrupt Unions to
Be the Target of Justice Dept.," New York Times, November
22, 1986.
- ^
Ostrow and Jackson, "U.S. Plans Suit to Get Control of Teamsters,"
Los Angeles Times, June 10, 1987; Yancey, "Teamsters
Leaders, Dissidents Alike Decry Possible Government Takeover Move,"
Associated Press, June 11, 1987; Elsasser and Warren,
"Teamsters Face Survival Test As U.S. Prepares Suit," Chicago
Tribune, June 11, 1987; Bradley, "Justice Department Tries to
Rid Unions of Mafia Influences," Christian Science
Monitor, June 12, 1987; Weinstein, "Unionists, Lawyers and Law
Professors Tell Discomfort," Los Angeles Times, June 14,
1987.
- ^
Weinstein and Ostrow, "Teamsters Rally Forces to Battle U.S.
Takeover," Los Angeles Times, September 10, 1987; Noble,
"Unions Support Teamsters In Fight With Justice Dept.," New
York Times, September 14, 1987; Jackson, "Teamsters Press
Congress to Avert U.S. Seizure of Union," Los Angeles
Times, September 16, 1987.
- ^
Ostrow and Jackson, "U.S. to Curtail Its Effort to Take Control of
Teamsters," Los Angeles Times, June 2, 1988.
- ^
Swoboda, "U.S. Sues to Take Over Teamsters," Washington
Post, June 29, 1988; Shenon, "U.S. Sues to Oust Teamster
Chiefs," New York Times, June 29, 1988; Ostrow, and
Quigley, "18 Teamsters Sued As Tools of the Mafia," Los Angeles
Times, June 29, 1988.
- ^
"Newspaper Says Prosecution of Teamsters Head to Be Sought,"
Associated Press, June 1, 1984.
- ^
Ostrow and Jackson, "Presser An FBI Informant Since 1970s, U.S.
Aides Say," Los Angeles Times, June 6, 1984.
- ^
Jackson and Ostrow, "Inquiry Delays Decision In Presser Case,"
Los Angeles Times, May 17, 1985; Ostrow and Jackson, "U.S.
to Drop Fraud Probe of Presser," Los Angeles Times, July
24, 1985; "Hartson, "Justice Won't Seek Presser's Indictment Over
Alleged Payroll Scam," Associated Press, July 24, 1985;
"U.S. Gives Up Effort to Indict Teamster Chief As Embezzler,"
New York Times, July 25, 1985.
- ^
Kurtz and Perl, "U.S. Mum On Decision to Drop Presser Case,"
Washington Post, July 25, 1985; Perl, "Senate Subcommittee
Requests Files On Aborted Probe of Teamsters Chief," Washington
Post, July 26, 1985; Ostrow, "FBI Told Justice Dept. of
Presser Role, Sources Say," Los Angeles Times, July 30,
1985; "Justice Department Officials Knew Presser Was FBI Informant,
Newspaper Says," Associated Press, July 30, 1985; Lardner,
"Presser Probe Hindered By FBI, Report Says," Washington
Post, May 9, 1986; Lardner, "FBI Hindering Probe of Presser,
Panel Told," Washington Post, May 10, 1986.
- ^
Ostrow, "FBI 'Promises' Cited For Lack of Presser Charges," Los
Angeles Times, July 25, 1985; Ostrow and Jackson, "Presser
Insisted FBI Gave Permission for Pay Scheme," Los Angeles
Times, July 26, 1985.
- ^
Jackson, "Justice Lawyers Target of Probe," Los Angeles
Times, August 27, 1985; Frantz, "Judge Orders Probe of FBI In
Presser Case," Chicago Tribune, August 27, 1985;
Engelberg, "U.S. Grand Jury to Open Presser Case Inquiry," New
York Times, September 18, 1985; Jackson and Ostrow, "Probing
Possible False Statements by FBI Agents," Los Angeles
Times, April 12, 1986.
- ^
Shenon, "Officials Say U.S. Plans Indictment of Teamster Chief,"
New York Times, May 10, 1986.
- ^
"Presser and FBI Agent Indicted," Los Angeles Times, May
16, 1986; Lardner, "Teamsters President Indicted," Washington
Post, May 17, 1986; Shenon, "Teamster Leader Is Indicted By
U.S. For Racketeering," New York Times, May 17, 1986;
"Presser, 2 Aides Plead Innocent," United Press
International, May 30, 1986.
- ^
Jackson and Ostrow, "Judge Gets Health Records, Postpones Presser's
Trial," Los Angeles Times, July 25, 1987; Jackson and
Ostrow, "Presser Called Free of Cancer and Ready For Fraud Trial,"
Los Angeles Times, September 5, 1987; "Attorney Says
Presser Mentally, Physically Unable to Stand Trial," Associated
Press, January 7, 1988; Jackson, "Teamsters' Presser Seeks
Trial Delay, Says He's Too Ill to Testify," Los Angeles
Times, January 8, 1988; "Judge Delays Trial to Give Presser
Time to Regain His Health," United Press International,
January 23, 1988; Swoboda, "Presser Trial Postponed for Health
Review," Washington Post, January 26, 1988; Kropko,
"Presser Trial Date Moved Back to July 12," Associated
Press, February 16, 1988.
- ^ Weinstein and Jackson, "Presser
Takes Leave of Absence As Chief of Teamsters, Citing Illness,
Sources Say," Los Angeles Times, May 5, 1988; Yancey,
"Presser Takes Leave As Teamsters Takeover Case Falters,"
Associated Press, May 5, 1988.
- ^ "Teamsters President
Hospitalized, Reportedly Has Brain Cancer," Associated
Press, May 14, 1988.
- ^ Swoboda, "Presser Terminally
Ill, Doctor Tells U.S. Judge," Washington Post, June 8,
1988; "Teamsters Leader Jackie Presser Hospitalized,"
Associated Press, June 28, 1988; "Presser Reported Alert,
Undergoing Tests In Cardiac Unit," Associated Press, June
30, 1988.
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External
links