From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The United States Senate Select Committee on Improper
Activities in Labor and Management (also known as the
McClellan Committee) was a select
committee created by the United States Senate on January
30, 1957,[1]
and dissolved on March 31, 1960.[2]
The select committee was directed to study the extent of criminal
or other improper practices in the field of labor-management relations or in
groups of employees or employers, and to suggest changes in the
laws of the United States that would provide protection against
such practices or activities.[2]
It conducted 253 active investigations, served 8,000 subpoenas for
witnesses and documents, held 270 days of hearings, took testimony
from 1,526 witnesses (343 of whom invoked the Fifth
Amendment), and compiled almost 150,000 pages of testimony.[1][2]
At the peak of its activity in 1958, 104 persons worked for the
committee.[2]
The select committee's work led directly to the enactment of the
Labor-Management Reporting and Disclosure
Act (Public Law 86-257, also known as the Landrum-Griffin Act)
on September 14, 1959.[2][3]
Background and creation
In December 1952, Robert F. Kennedy was appointed
assistant counsel for the Government Operations by the
then-chairman of the Committee on Government Operations, Senator Joseph
McCarthy.[4][5]
Kennedy resigned in July 1953,[6] but
rejoined the committee staff as chief minority counsel in February
1954.[4][7] When
the Democrats regained the majority in January 1955, Kennedy became
the committee's chief counsel.[4][5]
Soon thereafter, the Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations
of the
U.S. Senate Committee on Government Operations, under the
leadership of Democratic Senator John L.
McClellan (chair of the committee and subcommittee), began
holding hearings into labor racketeering.
Senator John L. McClellan (D-Ark.), chair of the Select
Committee.
Much of the Permanent Subcommittee's work focused on a scandal
which emerged in 1956 in the powerful trade union, the International Brotherhood of Teamsters. In
the mid-1950s, Midwestern Teamster leader Jimmy Hoffa began an
effort to unseat Dave
Beck, the union's international president. In October 1955,
mobster Johnny Dio met
with Hoffa in New
York City and the two men conspired to create as many as 15 paper locals (fake local unions which
existed only on paper) to boost Hoffa's delegate totals.[8][9]
When the paper locals applied for charters[10] from
the international union, Hoffa's political foes were outraged.[11][12] A
major battle broke out within the Teamsters over whether to charter
the locals, and the media attention led to investigations by the U.S. Department of
Justice and the Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations.[13]
Beck and other Teamster leaders subsequently challenged the
authority of the Permanent Subcommittee to investigate the union by
arguing that the Senate's
Labor and Public Welfare Committee had jurisdiction over labor
racketeering, not Government Operations.[5][14]
McClellan objected to the transfer of his investigation to the
Labor Committee because he felt the Labor chairman, Senator John F.
Kennedy, was too close to union leaders and would not
thoroughly investigate organized labor.[5]
To solve its jurisdictional and political problems, the Senate
established on January 30, 1957, an entirely new committee, the
Select Committee on Improper Activities in Labor and Management,
and gave it broad subpeona and investigative powers.[15] The
new select committee was given a year to complete its work,[16]
and charged with studying the extent of criminal or other improper
practices in the field of labor-management relations or in groups
of employees or employers. Half the membership was drawn from the
Committee on Government Operations and half from the
Committee on Labor and Public Welfare.[2]
McClellan, Ervin, McCarthy, and Mundt were drawn from Government
Operations, and Kennedy, McNamara, Ives, and Goldwater from
Labor.[5] An
equal number of Democrats and Republicans sat on the Select
Committee.[17]
Senator McClellan was named chair of the Select Committee, and Republican Senator Irving Ives of New York vice chair.[2][18]
Democrats and liberals, primarily, criticized the
committee for not having a neutral attitude toward labor. Only
three of the committee's eight members looked on organized labor
favorably, and only one of them (Senator Patrick McNamara) was
strongly pro-labor.[3][18][19][20] The
committee's other five members were strongly pro-management, and
that included the Select Committee's Southern conservative
chair,[21]
John L. McClellan.[1][5][3]
McClellan hired Robert F. Kennedy as the
subcommittee's chief counsel and investigator.[2]
Kennedy, too, did not have a neutral opinion of labor unions.
Appalled by stories he had heard about union intimidation on the West Coast, Kennedy
undertook the chief counsel's job determined to root out union
malfeasance and with little knowledge or understanding of or even
concern over management misbehavior.[4]
The biases of the Select Committee members and its chief counsel,
some observers concluded, led the committee to view corruption in
labor-management relations as a problem with unions, not
management, and management as nothing more than a victim.[3]
Senator McClellan gave Robert Kennedy extensive control over the
scheduling of testimony, areas of investigation, and questioning of
witnesses.[1][22] This
suited McClellan, a conservative Democrat and opponent of labor
unions: Robert Kennedy would take the brunt of organized labor's
outrage, while McClellan would be free to pursue an anti-labor
legislative agenda once the hearings began to draw to a close.[5][4]
Republican members of the Select Committee voiced strong
disagreement with McClellan's decision to let Kennedy set the
direction for the committee and ask most of the questions, but
McClellan largely ignored their protests.[1]
Robert Kennedy proved to be an inexpert interrogator, fumbling
questions and engaging in shouting matches with witnesses rather
than laying out legal cases against them.[1][4][18][23][24][25][26][27][28][29][30]
McClellan and Kennedy's goal had been to refer nearly all their
investigations to the Justice Department for prosection, but the
department refused to do so because it concluded that nearly all
the legal cases were significantly flawed.[1][31] A
frustrated Robert Kennedy publicly complained about the Justice
Department's decisions in September 1958.[1][32]
Chief Counsel Kennedy resolved to investigate a wide range of
labor unions and corporations, including the International
Brotherhood of Teamsters, the United Auto Workers (UAW), Anheuser-Busch,
Sears, and Occidental Life Insurance.[2]
The Select Committee also established formal liaisons with the Federal Bureau of
Investigation (FBI), Internal Revenue Service, Federal Narcotics Bureau, Department of Labor,
and other federal agencies as well as state and local offices and
officials involved in law enforcement.[2]
Investigations
The Select Committee focused its attention for most of 1957 on
the Teamsters union. Teamsters President Dave Beck fled the country
for a month to avoid its subpoenas before returning in March
1957.[33] The
Select Committee had a difficult time investigating the Teamsters.
Four of the paper locals were dissolved to avoid committee
scrutiny, several Teamster staffers provided verbal testimony which
differed substantially from their prior written statements (the
Select Committee eventually charged six of them with contempt
of Congress), and union records were lost or destroyed
(allegedly on purpose).[34] But,
working with the FBI, the Select Committee electrified the nation
when on February 22, 1957, wiretaps were played in public before a
national television audience in which Dio and Hoffa discussed the
creation of even more paper locals,[35]
including the establishment of a paper local to organize New York
City's 30,000 taxi cab drivers and use the charter as a means of
extorting money from a wide variety of employers.[36] As
1.2 million viewers[37]
watched on live television, evidence was unearthed over the next
few weeks of a mob-sponsored plot in which Oregon Teamsters unions
would seize control of the state legislature, state
police, and state attorney general's office
through bribery, extortion and blackmail.[38] On
March 14, 1957, Jimmy Hoffa was arrested for allegedly trying to
bribe an aide to the Select Committee.[39] Hoffa
denied the charges (and was later acquitted), but the arrest
trigged additional investigations and more arrests and indictments
over the following weeks.[40] Less
than a week later, Teamsters President Dave Beck admitted to
receiving an interest-free $300,000 loan from the Teamsters which
he had never repaid, and Select Committee investigators claimed
that loans to Beck and other union officials (and their businesses)
had cost the Teamsters more than $700,000.[41] Beck
appeared before the Select Committee for the first time on March
25, 1957, and notoriously invoked his Fifth
Amendment right against self-incrimination 117 times.[42] Beck
was called before the McClellan Committee again in May 1957, and
additional interest-free loans and other potentially illegal and
unethical financial transactions exposed.[43] Based
on these revelations, Beck was indicted for tax evasion on May 2,
1957.[44]
The Beck and Hoffa hearings generated strong criticisms of
Robert Kennedy. Many liberal critics said he was a brow-beater,
badgerer, insolent, overbearing, intolerant, and even vicious.[4][25][45]
Hoffa and other witnesses often were able to anger Kennedy to the
point where he lost control, and would shout and insult them.[4]
Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas, one of Robert
Kennedy's mentors and a close friend, criticized Kennedy for
presuming the guilt of anyone who exercised his Fifth Amendment
rights.[1][4]
Noted attorney Edward Bennett Williams accused
the Select Committee of bringing witnesses into executive session,
ascertaining that they would exercise their Fifth Amendment rights,
and then force them to return in public and refuse to answer
questions—merely to generate media attention.[4]
The Chicago American newspaper so
strongly criticized Robert Kennedy for his overbearing, zealous
behavior during the hearings that a worried Joseph P. Kennedy, Sr. rushed to
Washington,
D.C. to see for himself if Robert Kennedy was endangering John
Kennedy's political future.[4]
During much of the summer and fall of 1957, the Select Committee
investigated corruption in the
Bakery Workers Union, United Textile
Workers, Amalgamated Meat Cutters
Union, and Transport Workers
Union.[46] In
the late fall, the committee focused its attention on
union-busting, and examined the behavior of companies such as
Morton Packing Company, Continental Baking Company, and Sears,
Roebuck and Company.[47]
While continuing to investigate and hold hearings on other
unions and corporations, the McClellan Committee also began to
examine the behavior of Jimmy Hoffa and other Teamsters officials.
Senator McClellan accused Hoffa of attempting to gain control of
the nation's economy and set himself up as a sort of private
government.[48] The
Select Committee also accused Hoffa of instigating the creation of
the paper locals, and of arranging for a $400,000 loan to the
graft-ridden International
Longshoremen's Association in a bid to take over that union and
gain Teamsters control of the waterfront as well as warehouses.[49]
Johnny Dio, who by late summer 1957 was in prison serving time on
bribery and conspiracy charges, was paroled by a
federal court in order to testify at the Select Committee's
hearings.[50] But
in a two-hour appearance before the Select Committee, Dio invoked
his Fifth
Amendment right against self-incrimination 140 times, and
refused to answer any of the committee's questions.[51] But
despite the problems encountered in interrogating Dio, the Select
Committee developed additional testimony and evidence alleging
widespread corruption in Hoffa-controlled Teamster units was
presented in public in August 1957.[9][52] The
worsening corruption scandal led the AFL-CIO to eject the Teamsters
on December 6, 1957.[53]
As the Hoffa hearings occurred in August 1957, the Select
Committee met in executive session to restructure its organizations
and set its agenda for the future.[3]
The Select Committee had succeeded in securing the removal of Dave
Beck as Teamsters president and seemed on the verge of sending
Jimmy Hoffa to jail as well, but the Committee had also been
strongly criticized for its handling of witnesses and its apparent
one-sidedness in exposing union but not management corruption.[5][54] To
guide the Select Committee's investigations in the future,
McClellan established a set of 11 areas of investigation for the
committee, nine of which involved labor misdeeds and only one of
which involved management misbehavior (preventing workers from
organizing unions).[3]
The management-oriented area came last on the committee's list of
priorities, and there were no staff assigned to investigate the
issue.[55]
Under the new guidelines, the Select Committee's schedule of
hearings slowed. In January 1958, Chairman McClellan asked for and
received permission from the Senate to extend the deadline for
completing the committee's work for another year.[16]
For a short time early in the year, the Select Committee
investigated the International
Union of Operating Engineers, and uncovered a limited financial
scandal at the top of the union.[56] But
the main focus of the committee for the first half of the year was
the United Auto Workers. Republicans on the Select Committee,
notably Barry Goldwater, had for several months in late 1957
accused Robert Kennedy of covering up extensive corruption in the
UAW.[1][4][5][18]
The Republicans pointed to a lengthy, ongoing, and sometimes
violent strike which the UAW was conducting against the Kohler plumbing
fixtures company in Wisconsin.[1][4][5][18]
Walter
Reuther, President of the Auto Workers, told Select Committee
investigators that the Kohler Company was committing numerous unfair
labor practices against the union and that the union's books
were in order.[5]
Despite no evidence of any mismanagement or organized crime
infiltration, Kennedy and McClellan went ahead with hearings on the
UAW in February 1958. The five-week series of hearings produced no
evidence of corruption.[5][57] A
second set of hearings into the UAW in September 1959 lasted just
six days, and once more uncovered no evidence of UAW
malfeasance.[1][58] The
September 1959 hearings were the last public hearings the
embarrassed committee ever held.[5]
As the UAW hearings were winding down, the Select Committee
issued its first Interim Report on March 24, 1958. The report
roundly condemned Jimmy Hoffa (by now President of the Teamsters)
and accused the Teamsters of gathering enough power to destroy the
national economy.[24]
Refocusing its attention back on the Teamsters, the Select
Committee held a short set of hearings in August 1958 intended to
expose corruption by the Hoffa regime. But a number of witnesses
recanted their written testimony and the hearings led nowhere.[59]
In February 1959, the Select Committee's attention turned to an
investigation of organized crime.[1][3][60]
McClellan had won yet another one-year extension of the Select
Committee's existence in January, giving it additional time for
more investigations.[17]
This new focus was a natural outgrowth of the committee's previous
investigations, but it also reflected the committee's frustration
at uncovering no additional scandals like the one which had rocked
the Teamsters. Through much of the spring and summer of 1959, the
committee held a series of public hearings which brought a number
of organized crime figures to the public's attention, including Anthony Corrallo, Vito Genovese, Anthony
Provenzano, Joey
Glimco, Sam
Giancana, and Carlos Marcello.[1]
Although more muted and less frequent, criticisms of the Select
Committee and Robert Kennedy continued. Kennedy's moralism about
labor racketeering, several high-profile critics concluded, even
endangered the Constitution.[61]
Although McClellan wanted to further investigate organized crime,
the Select Committee had reached the limits of its jurisdiction and
no further investigations were made.
By September 1959, it was clear that the Select Committee was
not developing additional information to justify continued
operation.[62] A
second interim report was released in August 1959 once again
denouncing the Teamsters and Jimmy Hoffa.[63]
Robert F. Kennedy resigned as the Select Committee's chief counsel
on September 11, 1959, and joined Senator John F. Kennedy's
presidential campaign as campaign manager.[4][64]
Committee members became more involved in passing legislation to
deal with the abuses uncovered.
Disbandment and
legislative and other outcomes
The final report of the Select Committee on Improper Activities
in Labor and Management was issued on March 31, 1960. At that time,
the authority granted by the Senate to the Select Committee was
transferred to the Committee on Government Operations.[2][65]
During its existence, the Select Committee conducted 253 active
investigations, served 8,000 subpoenas for witnesses and documents,
held 270 days of hearings with 1,526 witnesses (343 of whom invoked
the Fifth Amendment), compiled almost 150,000 pages of testimony,
and issued two interim and one final report.[1][2]
At its peak, 104 persons were engaged in the work of the
committee,[1]
including 34 field investigators.[1][2]
Another 58 staffers were delegated to the committee by the
Government Accounting Office and worked in Detroit, Chicago, New York City, and southern Florida.[1][2]
To accommodate the huge staff, a corridor was blocked off in the Old Senate Office
Building and turned into a suite of offices.[1]
Some observers continued to criticize the Select Committee. In
1961, Yale
University law professor Alexander Bickel accused Kennedy of
being punitive and battering witnesses, compared his tactics to
those of Joseph McCarthy, and declared Kennedy unfit to be Attorney
General.[66] At
the turn of the century, historians and biographers continued to
criticize the Select Committee's lack of respect for the
constitutional rights of witnesses brought before it.[1][23][25][27]
Legislative and legal
outcomes
Several historic legal developments came out of the select
committee's investigation, including a U.S. Supreme Court
decision and landmark labor legislation. The right of union
officials to exercise their Fifth Amendment rights was upheld and a
significant refinement of constitutional law made when the U.S.
Supreme Court reaffirmed the right of union officials to not
divulge the location of union records in Curcio v. United
States, 354
U.S. 118 (1957).[67]
The Enemy Within, Robert F. Kennedy's best-selling book,
published in February 1960, which documents his experiences on the
Select Committee.
The scandals uncovered by the Select Committee led directly to
passage of the Labor-Management Reporting and Disclosure
Act (also known as the Landrum-Griffin Act) in 1959. Calls for
legislation and drafts of bills began circulating in the Senate as
early as May 1957.[68][69] Among
the more prominent bills was one submitted in 1958 by Senators John
F. Kennedy and Irving Ives (with assistance from nationally-known
labor law professor Archibald Cox)
which covered 30 areas, including union recordkeeping, finances,
and democratic organizational structures and rules.[24]
The Kennedy-Ives bill proved immensely controversial, leading to
the longest Senate debate of the year, and the greatest number of
amendments and floor votes any piece of legislation that year.[24]
But President Dwight D. Eisenhower opposed the
bill and it died when the Congressional session ended in December
1958. Kennedy reintroduced the bill, with some additional
provisions, in 1959. Although Ives had retired from the Senate,
Senator Sam Ervin agreed to co-sponsor the revised bill.[24]
The Kennedy-Ervin bill also encountered stiff opposition, and
Republicans were able to win Senate approval of a management "bill
of rights" to the bill which labor strongly denounced.[70] But
with this and other Republican-backed amendments, the bill passed
the Senate overwhelmingly.[24]
By 1959 the Eisenhower administration had crafted its own bill,
which was co-sponsored in the House of
Representatives by Phillip M. Landrum (Democrat from Georgia) and Robert P.
Griffin (Republican from Michigan). The Landrum-Griffin bill contained
much stricter financial reporting and fiduciary restrictions than
the Kennedy-Ervin bill as well as several unrelated provisions
restricting union organizing, picketing, and boycott activity.[71] A conference committee to reconcile
the House and Senate bills began meeting on August 18, 1959.[72] On
September 3 and 4, the House and Senate passed the conference
committee bill, which was far closer to the original
Landrum-Griffin bill than the Kennedy-Ervin bill, and President
Eisenhower signed the bill into law on September 14, 1959.[24][73]
After the Select Committee's mandate expired, Senator McClellan
and others advocated that the Senate expand the jurisdiction of one
or more committees not only to provide oversight of the new labor
law but also to continue the Senate's investigations into organized
crime. McClellan originally sought jurisdiction for his own
Committee on Government Operations, but members of his committee
balked at the request.[74]
However, McClellan was able to convince the full Senate to impose
jurisdiction on Government Operations, and the Permanent
Subcommittee on Investigations began making inquiries into matters
pertaining to syndicated or organized crime.[75]
Impact on key
participants
The national attention paid to Robert F. Kennedy during the
Select Committee's hearings helped launch his career as a
government official and politician.[1][23][26][76]
It also earned him a reputation for ruthlessness and hard work.[25][77] His
experiences with the Select Committee significantly affected Robert
Kennedy, and strongly influenced his decision to make fighting
organized crime a high priority during his tenure as United States Attorney
General.[23][78][79][80][81] After
leaving the Select Committee, Robert F. Kennedy spent the better
part of a year writing about his experiences and what he had
learned about unions and organized crime. Kennedy's book, The
Enemy Within, was published in February 1960.[82]
The hearings also made Jimmy Hoffa a household name in the
United States.[23][83][19]
The hearings were a critical turning point in Hoffa's career as a
labor leader.[37][76][19]
Bringing down Dave Beck ensured that Hoffa would become president
of the Teamsters, and outcome Robert Kennedy later regretted.[19][84]
Although Hoffa was indicted several times in federal and state
courts based on evidence uncovered by the Select Committee, he was
never convicted on any of the charges.[85]
Prosecutors and others accused Hoffa of jury tampering and suborning witnesses in order to
beat conviction, but these charges also were never proven in a
court of law.[85]
After he became U.S. Attorney General in January 1961, Robert F.
Kennedy formed a "get Hoffa squad" whose mission was to identify
additional evidence and secure a conviction against Hoffa.[4][28][26][76][85][86]
Kennedy's focus on Hoffa was so strong that many observers at the
time as well as later historians believed Kennedy had a personal
vendetta against Hoffa.[87][80][45][88] Hoffa
was eventually convicted by a federal district court
jury on March 4, 1964, on two counts of tampering with the jury
during his 1962 conspiracy trial in Nashville, Tennessee, and
sentenced to eight years in prison and a $10,000 fine.[85]
While on bail during his appeal, a second federal district
court jury convicted Hoffa on July 26, 1964, on one count of conspiracy and three counts of mail and wire fraud.[89] Hoffa
entered prison on March 7, 1967, and Frank Fitzsimmons was named Acting
President of the union.[90] Hoffa
resigned as Teamsters president on July 9, 1971.[91]
Barred by a commutation of sentence
agreement from participating directly or indirectly in union
activities until 1980, Hoffa was released from prison on December
23, 1971, but disappeared on July 30, 1975 (and was presumably
murdered).[85]
The hearings had positive benefits for other key participants as
well. The Kennedy-Ives bill was Senator John F. Kennedy's most
important legislative accomplishment, and although it was not
enacted into law many Senators nonetheless revised their opinion
and now saw him as a serious legislator.[1][24][87][92] This
helped remove a major obstacle to Kennedy's political
aspirations.[24]
Kennedy also used the publicity he gained from the Select
Committee's work to launch his own presidential bid in 1960.[23]
The work of the Select Committee also was a key turning point in
the Senate career of John L. McClellan. McClellan devoted
significant time and resources of the Permanent Subcommittee on
Investigations (of which he was chair) to pushing anti-organized
crime agenda in 1960s, and his efforts kept the issue alive despite
the prominence of other issues such as the civil
rights movement and Vietnam War.[76][79][93]
When limited jurisdiction over organized crime was transferred to
the Committee on Government Operations after the disbandment of the
Select Committee, Senator McClellan held a number of sensational
hearings on organized crime from 1960 to 1964 which became known as
the Valachi Hearings.[79][94] In
1962, McClellan published his own account of the Select Committee's
activities and findings in the book Crime Without
Punishment.[68][95] The
senator sponsored several pieces of important anti-crime
legislation in the 1960s and early 1970s, including the Omnibus
Crime Control and Safe Streets Act of 1968 and the Organized Crime Control Act of 1970 (part
of which contains the highly influential Racketeer
Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act).[79][93][96]
Members
Chief Counsel Robert F. Kennedy (
left) and Sen. John F.
Kennedy listen as Sen. Karl Mundt (
right) questions a
witness at a Select Committee hearing in May 1957. Eighteen months
later, Mundt would be the Select Committee's influential new Vice
Chair.
The Select Committee's chair was Senator John L. McClellan, and
the vice chair was Senator Irving Ives. An equal number of
Democrats and Republicans sat on the committee.[17]
Republican Senator Joseph McCarthy died on May 2, 1957, and was
replaced by Republican Senator Homer E. Capehart.[1]
Democratic Senator Patrick McNamara resigned from the committee on
March 31, 1958, to protest the Select Committee's rough treatment
of union witnesses.[97] He
was replaced by Democratic Senator Frank Church.
The Select Committee's chair was Senator John L. McClellan. With
the retirement of Senator Irving Ives from the Senate in December
1958,[18]
the new Vice Chair became Senator Karl E. Mundt.[3]
Senator Homer E. Capehart joined the committee to keep the partisan
balance.[5][17]
Chairmen and
staff
Senator John L. McClellan (D-Arkansas) was the committee's only
chair for its entire history.
At the peak of its activity in 1958, 104 persons worked for the
committee, including 34 field investigators.[2]
Another 58 staff were loaned to the committee from the General Accounting Office.[1][2]
Committee staff included:
- Robert F. Kennedy, Chief Counsel.
- Carmine Bellino, Chief Assistant to the Chief Counsel.[87][21]
- Angela Novello, Personal Secretary to the Chief Counsel.[87]
- Robert E. Manuel, Assistant Counsel.[1]
- Walter Sheridan, Chief Investigator.[26][87]
- Paul Tierney, investigator.[21]
- LaVern J. Duffy, investigator.[1]
- Richard G. Sinclair, investigator.[1]
- James F. Mundie, investigator.[1]
- John T. Thiede, investigator.[1]
- Ruth Y. Watt, Chief Clerk.[1]
- Kenneth O'Donnell, administrative
assistant.[25][26][87]
- Pierre
Salinger, investigator.[25][26][21]
- John
Seigenthaler, investigator.[26]
- Edwin Guthman, investigator.[26]
References
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Hilty, James. Robert Kennedy: Brother Protector.
Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 2000. ISBN 1566397669
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"Chapter 18. Records of
Senate Select Committees, 1789-1988." In Guide to the Records
of the United States Senate at the National Archives, 1789-1989:
Bicentennial Edition. (Doct. No. 100-42) Robert W. Coren, Mary
Rephlo, David Kepley, and Charles South, eds. Washington, D.C.:
National Archives and Records Administration, 1989.
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Witwer, David Scott. Corruption and Reform in the Teamsters
Union. Urbana, Ill.: University of Illinois Press, 2003. ISBN
0252028252
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Schlesinger, Arthur M., Jr. Robert Kennedy and His Times.
Paperback ed. Ballantine Books, 1978. ISBN 0345410610
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Lee, R. Alton. Eisenhower & Landrum-Griffin: A Study in
Labor-management Politics. Lexington, Ky.: University Press of
Kentucky, 1990. ISBN 081311683X
- ^
Robert Kennedy's resignation was prompted by concerns over the
McCarthy committee's procedures, which he felt did not sufficiently
protect the rights of witnesses and skirted both federal law and
legal ethics. See: Schlesinger, Robert Kennedy and His
Times, 1978; Schwartz, David G. Cutting the Wire:
Gambling, Prohibition and the Internet. Las Vegas: University
of Nevada Press, 2005. ISBN 0874176204
- ^
In the U.S. Congress, each committee in each chamber has its own
budget and its own staff, which can vary widely depending on the
committee's jurisdiction, size, and political importance. A small
percentage of each committee's budget and staff are devoted to the
institutional needs of the committee. The staff employed in this
capacity are known as "committee staff," and are nonpartisan career
employees. Under the rules established by the majority party in
each chamber, the remaining budget and staff are allocated to the
majority and largest minority party, respectively. These staff are
known as "majority staff" and "minority staff," although many
commentators refer to all committee staff as "committee staff"
(leading to some confusion). The tradition of "firm party control"
in the House of Representatives usually means that the majority
party will control as much as 80 percent of a committee's staff and
budget, while the minority party and nonpartisan committee staff
control 10 percent each. In the Senate, the tradition of comity and
unanimous consent has led to distribution of staff and budgetary
resources on a basis closer to each party's representation in that
chamber. There is wide variety in the titles and functions of
committee, majority, and minority staff. As Chief Minority Counsel,
Kennedy led a small legal staff employed to provide legal and
strategic advice the minority party on the committee. See:
Congressional Management Foundation. Setting Course: A
Congressional Management Guide. Washington, D.C.:
Congressional Management Foundation, 2008. 1930473117; Koempel,
Michael L. and Schneider, Judy. Congressional Deskbook: The
Practical and Comprehensive Guide to Congress. 5th ed.
Washington, D.C.: TheCapitol.Net, Inc., 2007. ISBN 1587330970;
Oleszek, Walter J. Congressional Procedures and the Policy
Process. 7th paperback ed. Washington, D.C.: CQ Press, 2007.
ISBN 0872893030
- ^
"No Ordinary Hoodlum," New York Times, August 30,
1956.
- ^ a
b
Loftus, Joseph A. "Top Beck Aide Links Hoffa to 'Phony' Teamster
Locals." New York Times. August 20, 1957.
- ^
Chartering is the process by which a local labor union becomes part
of a larger regional, national, or international union. The charter
is similar to a constitution, and establishes the membership
requirements, work and/or geographical jurisdiction, and structure
of the new local union. Early in American history, a parent union
would issue a charter, and organize workers into the new union.
Since the mid-20th century, more frequently unions have organized
workers first and then issued a charter. See: Doherty, Robert
Emmett. Industrial and Labor Relations Terms: A Glossary.
5th ed. Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press, 1989. ISBN
0875461522
- ^ Katz, Ralph.
"Teamsters' Union in Control Fight." New York Times.
January 10, 1956.
- ^
Raskin, A.H. "Teamster Units Stir New Storm." New York
Times. February 4, 1956; Raskin, A.H. "Hoffa of the Teamsters
Forcing Labor Showndown." New York Times. March 4,
1956.
- ^
Ranzal, Edward. "Inquiry Is Set Off By Lacey Charge." New York
Times. March 24, 1956; Ranzal, Edward. "7 Teamster Units Face
U.S. Inquiry." New York Times. March 30, 1956; Kihss,
Peter. "Local Chartered With No Members." New York Times,
April 25, 1956; Kihss, Peter. "Teamsters' Rules Appall U.S. Judge."
New York Times. April 26, 1956; "Racketeer Is Guilty of
Contempt." New York Times. May 10, 1956; Levey, Stanley.
"Writ Restores Lacey As Teamster Leader." New York Times.
May 13, 1956; "Dio Indicted Here In Union Sell-Out." New York
Times. June 20, 1956; "Dio's Locals Face Charter Reviews."
New York Times. June 21, 1956; Raskin, A.H. "Senators
Study Dio Union Tie-In." New York Times. September 14,
1956; Roth, Jack. "Dio and Unionist Named Extorters." New York
Times. October 30, 1956; "Teamsters Spurn 'Dio Local' Order."
New York Times. December 5, 1956; "Lacey Will Defy
Teamster Chief." New York Times. December 6, 1956; Raskin,
A.H. "Dio 'Paper' Unions Offer First Dues." New York
Times. December 13, 1956; Loftus, Joseph A. "Teamster Union
Tied to Rackets." New York Times. January 6, 1957; Raskin,
A.H. "O'Rourke Wins Post." New York Times. January 9,
1957.
- ^
Loftus, Joseph A. "Teamsters Aide Balks at Inquiry on Union
Rackets." New York Times. January 19, 1957; Raskin, A.H.
"Teamsters Avoid Challenge to U.S." New York Times.
January 24, 1957; Raskin, A.H. "Teamsters Seek Way to Avoid a
Showdown." New York Times. January 27, 1957.
- ^
"New Senate Unit to Widen Inquiry In Labor Rackets." New York
Times. January 24, 1957; "Teamster Study Is 3 Months Old."
New York Times. May 26, 1957; "Senate Votes Inquiry on
Labor Rackets." New York Times. January 31, 1957.
- ^ a
b
"M'Clellan Asks Funds." Associated Press. January 14,
1958.
- ^ a
b
c
d
"M'Clellan Panel Keeps Party Ratio." Associated Press.
January 23, 1959.
- ^ a
b
c
d
e
f
Savage, Sean. JFK, LBJ, and the Democratic Party. Albany,
N.Y.: SUNY Press, 2004. ISBN 0791461696
- ^ a
b
c
d
Arnesen, Eric. Encyclopedia of U.S. Labor and Working-Class
History. Boca Raton, Fla.: CRC Press, 2006. ISBN
0415968267
- ^
Buffa, Dudley W. Union Power and American Democracy: The UAW
and the Democratic Party, 1935-72. Ann Arbor, Mich.:
University of Michigan Press, 1984. ISBN 0472100424
- ^ a
b
c
d
Salinger, Pierre. P. S.: A Memoir. New York: Macmillan,
2001. ISBN 0312300204
- ^
Phillips, Cabell. "The McClellan-Kennedy Investigating Team."
New York Times. March 17, 1957.
- ^ a
b
c
d
e
f
Goldfarb, Ronald L. Perfect Villains, Imperfect Heroes: Robert
F. Kennedy's War Against Organized Crime. Reprint ed.
Sterling, Va." Capital Books, 2002. ISBN 1931868069
- ^ a
b
c
d
e
f
g
h
i
O'Brien, Michael. John F. Kennedy: A Biography. New York:
Macmillan, 2006. ISBN 0312357451
- ^ a
b
c
d
e
f
Mills, Judie. Robert Kennedy: His Life. Minneapolis,
Minn.: Twenty-First Century Books, 1998. ISBN 1562942506
- ^ a
b
c
d
e
f
g
h
Talbot, David. Brothers: The Hidden History of the Kennedy
Years. New York: Simon and Schuster, 2007. ISBN
0743269187
- ^ a
b
Newfield, Jack. RFK: A Memoir. New York: Nation Books,
2003. ISBN 1560255315
- ^ a
b
Thomas, Evan. Robert Kennedy: His Life. Reprint ed. New
York: Simon and Schuster, 2002. ISBN 0743203291
- ^ Woodiwiss, Michael (2001). Organized
crime and American power: a history. University of Toronto
Press. ISBN
9780802082787.
- ^
Clarke, Thurston. The Last Campaign: Robert F. Kennedy and 82
days That Inspired America. New York: Macmillan, 2008. ISBN
0805077928
- ^
Malcolm Anderson, the Assistant U.S. Attorney in charge of the
Justice Department's Criminal Division, told Kennedy in a letter
made available to the news media "that of the fourteen cases that
the committee has referred to the departments as involving perjury,
eight have been closed after investigation and study because the
evidence failed to substantiate the allegations, and that the
committee was so advised." See: "Rogers Defended on Prosecutions."
Associated Press. September 15, 1958.
- ^
"Rogers Assailed for Delay In Rackets Perjury Cases."
Associated Press. September 14, 1958; "Kennedy Asks U.S.
Cleanup of Teamsters." Chicago Daily Tribune. September
22, 1958.
- ^
"Beck Visiting in the Bahamas." New York Times. February
6, 1957; "Citation Is Asked for 3 Teamsters." New York
Times. February 7, 1957; "Beck On Airliner Bound for London."
New York Times. February 8, 1957; Love, Kenneth. "Beck
Denies Aim to Dodge Inquiry." New York Times. February 9,
1957; "Tourist Beck." New York Times. February 10, 1957;
Raskin, A.H. "Beck Slips Back to U.S. and Faces Senate Subpoena."
New York Times. March 11, 1957.
- ^
Raskin, A.H. "Union Dissolves Four Dio Locals." New York
Times. February 15, 1957; Loftus, Joseph A. "Senators Study
Two Unions Here." New York Times. February 16, 1957; "4
Teamsters' Aides Cited for Contempt In Balking Inquiry." New
York Times. February 20, 1957; "Records Destroyed, M'Clellan
Charges." New York Times. February 22, 1957; "More Data of
Union Reported Missing." Associated Press. February 23,
1957; "Teamster Admits Destroying Data." New York Times.
March 14, 1957; "A Teamster Local, Under Fire, Robbed." United
Press International. March 17, 1957; Mooney, Richard E.
"M'Clellan Hunts Auditor of Union and Son of Beck." New York
Times. April 28, 1957.
- ^
"Wiretaps on Dio and Hoffa Cited." New York Times.
February 23, 1957; "Labor Inquiry Gets Secret Tape Talks." New
York Times. February 24, 1957.
- ^
"Wiretaps on Dio and Hoffa Cited." New York Times.
February 23, 1957; "Labor Inquiry Gets Secret Tape Talks." New
York Times. February 24, 1957; Loftus, Joseph A. "Hoffa Bid to
Dio On Union Charged." New York Times. August 17, 1957;
Loftus, Joseph A. "Senators Reveal Hoffa Bid to Get Dio In
Teamsters." New York Times. August 22, 1957; "Wiretaps of
2 Hoffa-Dio Talks." New York Times. August 23, 1957.
- ^ a
b
Bernstein, Lee. The Greatest Menace: Organized Crime in Cold
War America. Cambridge, Mass.: University of Massachusetts
Press, 2002. ISBN 155849345X
- ^
Loftus, Joseph A. "Witnesses Link Teamsters Union to Underworld."
New York Times. February 27, 1957; Loftus, Joseph A.
"Teamsters Chiefs Tied to Vice Plot and to Gambling." New York
Times. February 28, 1957; Loftus, Joseph A. "Teamsters Chiefs
Charged With Plot to Rule Oregon, Sought All Law Enforcement
Powers." New York Times. March 2, 1957; Loftus, Joseph A.
"Oregon Gambler Tells of Pay-Off." New York Times. March
7, 1957; Loftus, Joseph A. "Portland Mayor Accused of Bribe."
New York Times. March 8, 1957; Loftus, Joseph A. "Portland
Called Vice-Ridden Now." New York Times. March 9, 1957;
Loftus, Joseph A. "Teamsters Paid Gamblers' Bills." New York
Times. March 13, 1957; "Holmes Denies Charge." New York
Times. March 14, 1957; Loftus, Joseph A. "Brewster Denies
Teamsters' Plot to Rule Rackets." New York Times. March
16, 1957; "Portland Mayor Seized In Racket, Prosecutor Held."
New York Times. March 29, 1957.
- ^
Loftus, Joseph A. "F.B.I. Seizes Hoffa In A Plot To Bribe Senate
Staff Aide." New York Times. March 14, 1957.
- ^
Sloane, Arthur A. Hoffa. Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press,
1991. ISBN 0262193094; Loftus, Joseph A. "Unionist Denies Bribery."
New York Times. March 15, 1957; Loftus, Joseph A. "U.S.
Jury Indicts 4 Teamster Aides Silent In Inquiry." New York
Times. March 19, 1957; Loftus, Joseph A. "U.S. Jury Indicts
Hoffa, Attorney." New York Times. March 20, 1957; "8 Hoffa
Aides in Detroit Get Subpoenas to Appear Before U.S. Rackets Jury
Here." New York Times. March 20, 1957; "Hoffa, Attorney
Plead Not Guilty." New York Times. March 30, 1957; Loftus,
Joseph A. "Hoffa Urges Court to Quash Charges." New York
Times. April 23, 1957; Ranzal, Edward. "Jury Here Indicts
Hoffa On Wiretap." New York Times. May 15, 1957.
- ^
"Beck Says Union Lent Him $300,000 Without Interest." New York
Times. March 18, 1957; Drury, Allen. "Teamster Loss Put At
$709,420." New York Times. March 23, 1957; Morris, John D.
"Inquiry Tracing Funds Beck Used." New York Times. March
24, 1957; "Million Teamster Loan To Tracks Under Study." New
York Times. March 30, 1957.
- ^
Loftus, Joseph A. "Beck Appearance Today Indicated." New York
Times. March 26, 1957; Loftus, Joseph A. "Beck Uses 5th
Amendment to Balk Senate Questions About Teamsters' $322,000."
New York Times. March 27, 1957; Loftus, Joseph A.
"M'Clellan Scores Beck for 'Theft' of Union's Funds." New York
Times. March 28, 1957.
- ^
Loftus, Joseph A. "Beck Called Back By Senate Inquiry." New
York Times. May 2, 1957; Loftus, Joseph A. "Beck Again Fails
to Give Answers." New York Times. May 9, 1957; Loftus,
Joseph A. "Kickback to Beck On Loan Charged." New York
Times. May 10, 1957; Loftus, Joseph A. "Loan of $200,000 to
Beck Revealed at Senate Inquiry." New York Times. May 14,
1957; Drury, Allen. "Inquiry Is Told Shefferman Sought $7l,500 in
Sale of Land to Teamsters." New York Times. May 16, 1957;
Loftus, Joseph A. "$100,000 Repaid By Beck to Union in Last 2
Weeks." New York Times. May 17, 1957; Loftus, Joseph A.
"Beck Aide Pleads the 5th 71 Times." New York Times. May
18, 1957.
- ^
"Beck Is Indicted." New York Times. May 3, 1957; Loftus,
Joseph A. "Beck Posts A Bond." New York Times. May 4,
1957; "Becks Indicted In Sale of Cars." New York Times.
July 13, 1957.
- ^ a
b
Shesol, Jeff. Mutual Contempt: Lyndon Johnson, Robert Kennedy,
and the Feud That Defined a Decade. New York: W. W. Norton
& Company, 1998. ISBN 0393318559; Richardson, Darcy G. A
Nation Divided: The 1968 Presidential Campaign. Bloomington,
Ind.: iUniverse, 2001. ISBN 0595236995
- ^
"New Charge Faces Bakeres' Union Chief." United Press
International. July 14, 1957; Loftus, Joseph A. "Beating
Charged to Union Leader." New York Times. July 17, 1957;
Loftus, Joseph A. "Use of Union Fund Linked to Officer." New
York Times. July 24, 1957; "2 in Union Plead 5th."
Associated Press. October 15, 1957; Levey, Stanley.
"T.W.U. Unit Linked to Senate Inquiry." New York Times.
October 22, 1957.
- ^
Loftus, Joseph A. "Senate Inquiry Focuses on Some Management Sins."
New York Times. November 3, 1957; Loftus, Joseph A.
"Company Accused of Union Busting." New York Times.
October 23, 1957; Loftus, Joseph A. "Concern Defends Its Labor
Policy." New York Times. October 24, 1957; Lewis, Anthony.
"Sears Labor Role Deplored By Aide As 'Disgraceful'." New York
Times. October 26, 1957.
- ^
"M'Clellan Scores Hoffa Bid." New York Times. August 4,
1957.
- ^
Loftus, Joseph A. "Hoffa Is Linked to Dio In Scheme To Control
Port." New York Times. August 1, 1957; Loftus, Joseph A.
"Hoffa Is Accused of Using Dio In Bid For Control Here." New
York Times. August 23, 1957.
- ^
"Court Paroles Dio and 3 Others to Testify Before Senate Hearings
on Labor Rackets." New York Times. August 3, 1957.
- ^
Shanley, J.P. "Du Mont Tally Machine Kept Busy as Dio Invokes Fifth
Amendment at Hearing." New York Times. August 9, 1957;
Loftus, Joseph A. "Dio Pleads Fifth." New York Times.
August 9, 1957.
- ^
"Inquiry to Stress History of Hoffa." Associated Press.
August 11, 1957; Drury, Allen. "Two Racketeers Tied to O'Rourke."
New York Times. August 16, 1957; Mooney, Richard E.
"Inquiry Set to Press Hoffa on Role Here." New York Times.
August 18, 1957; Loftus, Joseph A. "Hoffa Says He Got $120,000 In
Loans Without Security." New York Times. August 21, 1957;
Loftus, Joseph A. "Senators Reveal Hoffa Bid to Get Dio In
Teamsters." New York Times. August 22, 1957; Loftus,
Joseph A. "Hoffa Is Accused of Using Dio in Bid for Control Here."
New York Times. August 23, 1957; "M'Clellan Seeks A
Perjury Check On Hoffa Replies." New York Times. August
25, 1957; Drury, Allen. "New Fund Abuses Charged to Hoffa." New
York Times. September 24, 1957; Drury, Allen. "M'Clellan Seeks
Teamsters' Files." New York Times. October 11, 1957;
"Hoffa Called Ruler of Hoodlum Empire." New York Times.
March 26, 1958.
- ^
"A.F.L.-C.I.O. to Go Ahead With Expulsion of Teamsters." New
York Times. December 4, 1957; Raskin, "Meany Will Drop
Teamster Ouster If Hoffa Gets Out." New York Times.
December 5, 1957; "Teamsters Await Expulsion Today." New York
Times. December 6, 1957; Raskin, "A.F.L.-C.I.O. Ousts
Teamsters Union By Vote of 5 to 1." New York Times.
December 7, 1957.
- ^
Fones-Wolf, Elizabeth. Selling Free Enterprise: The Business
Assault on Labor and Liberalism, 1945-60. Urbana, Ill.:
University of Illinois Press, 1994. ISBN 0252064399; McCulloch,
Frank W. and Bornstein, Tim. The National Labor Relations
Board. Santa Barbara, Calif.: Praeger Publishers, 1974;
Finkelman, Paul. Encyclopedia of American Civil Liberties.
New York: CRC Press, 2006. ISBN 0415943426
- ^
Only one set of hearings were ever held on the topic of management
misdeeds, in mid-fall 1957. See: Witwer, Corruption and Reform
in the Teamsters Union, 2003.
- ^
Loftus, Joseph A. "Union Head Cited on Expense Funds." New York
Times. January 31, 1958; Raskin, A.H. "A.F.L.-C.I.O. Starts
Engineer Inquiry." New York Times. February 5, 1958.
- ^
Baltakis, Anthony. "On the Defensive: Walter Reuther's Testimony
before the McClellan Labor Rackets Committee." Michigan
Historical Review. 25 (1999); Barnard, John. American
Vanguard: The United Auto Workers During the Reuther Years,
1935-1970. Detroit: Wayne State University Press, 2005. ISBN
0814332978; "Rackets Group Ends 6 Weeks of Inquiry." United
Press International. April 2, 1958.
- ^
"Inquiry on U.A.W. Opened to Public." Associated Press.
August 19, 1959; "M'Clellan Group Ends U.A.W. Study." United
Press International. September 10, 1959.
- ^
The Select Committee would seek to prosecute 13 witnesses for
contempt of Congress because of the recantments. See: Loftus,
Joseph A. "Senators Balked in Effor to Link Hoffa to Pay-Off."
New York Times. August 6, 1958; Drury, Allen. "Rackets
Unit Asks Prosecution for 13." New York Times. August 9,
1958.
- ^
Drury, Allen. "M'Clellan Calls Mobs Peril to U.S." New York
Times. February 26, 1959.
- ^
A noted attorney, speaking before the New York Bar Association,
concluded that the Select Committee purposefully asked witnesses
about issues it knew they could not answer without incriminating
themselves. This led witnesses to rely on their Fifth Amendment
rights repeatedly, and the Select Committee utilized this reliance
to imply that the witnesses were guilty. This undercut the public's
support for the Fifth Amendment, and endangered the right. See:
Weaver, Jr., Warren. "Fifth Amendment Declared Abused." New
York Times. June 27, 1959.
- ^
"M'Clellan Group Ends U.A.W. Study." United Press
International. September 10, 1959.
- ^
Loftus, Joseph A. "Hoffa Denounced in Senate Report for Union
Abuses." New York Times. August 5, 1959.
- ^
"Kennedy Quits as Inquiry Aide." New York Times. September
11, 1959.
- ^
"Report Declares Hoffa Pretender." New York Times. March
29, 1960; Loftus, Joseph A. "Vending Devices Linked to Racket."
New York Times. April 1, 1960.
- ^
Bickel, Alexander M. "Robert F. Kennedy: The Case Against Him for
Attorney General." The New Republic. January 9, 1961.
- ^
"Teamster Wins Contempt Test." New York Times. June 11,
1957; Goldstein, Howard W. Grand Jury Practice. New York:
Law Journal Press, 1998. ISBN 1588520838; Snider, Jerome G. and
Ellins, Howard A. Corporate Privileges and Confidential
Information. Rev. ed. New York: Law Journal Press, 1999. ISBN
1588520870; Fellman, David. Defendants Rights Today.
Madison, Wisc.: University of Wisconsin Press, 1977. ISBN
0299072045
- ^ a
b
Jacobs, James B. Mobsters, Unions, and Feds: The Mafia and the
American Labor Movement. New York: NYU Press, 2006. ISBN
0814742734
- ^
"Union Curbs Foreseen." New York Times. May 13, 1957;
"M'Clellan Sees Stiff Labor Law." New York Times. May 18,
1957; Loftus, Joseph A. "Congress Disclosures Forecast New Labor
Legislation." New York Times. June 2, 1957; Raskin, A.H.
"White House Gives Program to Curb Abuses in Unions." New York
Times. December 6, 1957; Higgins, John E. and Janus, Peter A.
The Developing Labor Law: The Board, the Courts, and the
National Labor Relations Act. 5th ed. Washington, D.C.: BNA
Books, 2006. ISBN 1570185859; Wilson, Phillip B. "Conquering the
Enemy Within: The Case for Reform of the Landrum-Griffin Act."
Journal of Labor Research. 26:1 (December 2005).
- ^
Loftus, Joseph A. "Kennedy Suffers Setback As Labor Bill Is
Amended." New York Times. April 23, 1959.
- ^
For example, the Landrum-Griffin bill also barred members of the
Communist Party and convicted felons from holding union office,
prohibited secondary boycotts, prohibited
collective bargaining agreement allowing union members to refuse to
handle cargo which had been handled by strikebreakers, and restricted picketing
to obtain recognition of the union. See: Higgins and Janus, The
Developing Labor Law: The Board, the Courts, and the National Labor
Relations Act, 2006; Wilson, "Conquering the Enemy Within: The
Case for Reform of the Landrum-Griffin Act," Journal of Labor
Research, December 2005; Loftus, Joseph A. "President Terms
Labor Bill Weak." New York Times. April 30, 1959; Loftus,
Joseph A. "House Approves Labor Bill Urged By The President."
New York Times. August 14, 1959.
- ^
Loftus, Joseph A. "Labor Bill Fight Put to Conferees." New York
Times. August 18, 1959.
- ^
Loftus, Joseph A. "New Labor Bill With Wide Curbs Set for Passage."
New York Times. September 3, 1959.
- ^
Loftus, Joseph A. "Watchdog Urged in Labor Reform." New York
Times. March 16, 1960; Loftus, Joseph A. "2 Senate Groups Vie
As Watchdog." New York Times. March 22, 1960; Loftus,
Joseph A. "M'Clellan Fails in Watchdog Bid." New York
Times. March 25, 1960.
- ^
"Senate Rules Committee Backs Extension of Rackets Inquiry."
New York Times. March 31, 1960; Loftus, Joseph A. "Senate
Extends Rackets Inquiry." New York Times. April 12, 1960;
Committee on Homeland Security
and Governmental Affairs. "PSI Subcommittee, Historical
Background." United States Senate. No date.
- ^ a
b
c
d
Reppetto, Thomas. Bringing Down the Mob: The War Against the
American Mafia. Reprint ed. New York: Macmillan, 2007. ISBN
0805086595
- ^
Palmero, Joseph A. In His Own Right: The Political Odyssey of
Senator Robert F. Kennedy. New York: Columbia University
Press, 2002. ISBN 0231120699; Shakow, Peter. "An Insider's Look at
RFK and Organized Crime." American Journal of Criminal
Law. Summer 1997.
- ^ Marion, Nancy E. A
History of Federal Crime Control Initiatives, 1960-1993. Santa
Barbara, Calif.: Greenwood Publishing Group, 1994. ISBN
0275946495
- ^ a
b
c
d
Kelly, Robert J.; Chin, Ko-lin; and Schatzberg, Rufus. Handbook
of Organized Crime in the United States. Santa Barbara,
Calif.: Greenwood Publishing Group, 1994. ISBN 0313283664
- ^ a
b
Davis, John H. The Kennedys: Dynasty and Disaster. New
York: McGraw-Hill, 1984. ISBN 0070158606
- ^
Theoharis, Athan G.; Poveda, Tony G.; Rosenfeld, Susan; and Powers,
Richard Gid. The FBI: A Comprehensive Reference Guide.
Santa Barbara, Calif.: Greenwood Publishing Group, 1999. ISBN
089774991X
- ^
Loftus, Joseph A. "Counsel's Own Story." New York Times.
February 28, 1960.
- ^
James, Ralph C. and James, Estelle. Hoffa and the Teamsters: A
Study of Union Power. New York: Van Nostrand, 1965.
- ^
Schwartz, David G. Cutting the Wire: Gambling, Prohibition and
the Internet. Las Vegas: University of Nevada Press, 2005.
ISBN 0874176204; Kennedy, Robert F. The Enemy Within: The
McClellan Committee's Crusade Against Jimmy Hoffa and Corrupt Labor
Unions. New York: Harper and Row, 1960.
- ^ a
b
c
d
e
Brill, Steven. The Teamsters. Paperback ed. New York:
Simon & Schuster, 1979. ISBN 067182905X; Sloane, Arthur A.
Hoffa. Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, 1991. ISBN
0262193094
- ^
Brand, Charles. "I Heard You Paint Houses": Frank "The
Irishman" Sheeran and the Inside Story of the Mafia, the Teamsters
and the Last Ride of Jimmy Hoffa. New York: Random House,
2005. ISBN 1586420895; Navsky, Victor S. Kennedy Justice.
New York: Atheneum, 1971; Giglio, James N. The Presidency of
John F. Kennedy. Lawrence, Kan.: University Press of Kansas,
1991. ISBN 0700605150; Katzenbach, Nicholas deB. Some of It Was
Fun: Working with RFK and LBJ. New York: W. W. Norton &
Company, 2008. ISBN 0393067254
- ^ a
b
c
d
e
f
Mahoney, Richard D. Sons & Brothers: The Days of Jack and
Bobby Kennedy. New York: Arcade Publishing, 1999. ISBN
1559704802
- ^
Axelrod, Alan and Phillips, Charles. What Every American Should
Know about American History: 225 Events That Shaped the
Nation. 3rd ed. Cincinnati: Adams Media, 2008. ISBN
1598694286; Steel, Ronald. In Love With Night: The American
Romance With Robert Kennedy. New York: Simon & Schuster,
2000. ISBN 0684808293
- ^
Hoffa was convicted of embezzling money from a Teamster-run pension fund and
using it to invest in a Florida retirement community. In return,
Hoffa had a 45 percent interest in the project, and he and several
others received kickbacks in
the form of "finder's fees" from developers for securing the money.
See: Brill, Steven. The Teamsters. Paperback ed. New York:
Simon & Schuster, 1979. ISBN 067182905X; Sloane, Arthur A.
Hoffa. Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, 1991. ISBN
0262193094
- ^
"Board Acts on Succession." New York Times. March 1, 1967;
Jones, David R. "Successor Choice Named By Hoffa." New York
Times. May 4, 1966; Jones, David R. "Hoffa's Candidate Gets
Clear Field as Potential President of Teamsters." New York
Times. June 29, 1966; Jones, David R. "Hoffa Re-Elected
Teamsters' Chief." New York Times. July 8, 1966.
- ^
Shabecoff, Philip. "Hoffa Is Stepping Aside As Teamsters'
President." New York Times. June 4, 1971; Salpuka, Agis.
"Teamsters Elect Fitzsimmons To Succeed Hoffa as President."
New York Times. July 9, 1971.
- ^
Sloane, Arthur A. Hoffa. Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press,
1991. ISBN 0262193094
- ^ a
b
Williams, Nancy A. and Whayne, Jeannie M. Arkansas Biography: A
Collection of Notable Lives. Little Rock, Ark.: University of
Arkansas Press, 2000. ISBN 155728587X
- ^
De Stefano, George. An Offer We Can't Refuse: The Mafia in the
Mind of America. New York: Macmillan, 2006. ISBN 0571211577;
Maas, Peter. The Valachi Papers. New York: Putnam, 1968;
Kelly, Robert J. Encyclopedia of Organized Crime in the United
States. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 2000. ISBN
0313306532; Sifakis, Carl. The Encyclopedia of American
Crime. 2d ed. New York: Facts on File, 2001. ISBN
0816046336
- ^
McClellan, John L. Crime Without Punishment. New York:
Duell Sloan and Pearce, 1962.
- ^
Levy, Leonard Williams. A License to Steal: The Forfeiture of
Property. Chapel Hill, N.C.: UNC Press, 1995. ISBN 0807822426;
Batista, Paul A. Civil RICO Practice Manual. 3rd ed. New
York: Aspen Publishers, 2007. ISBN 0735567824
- ^
"M'Namara Quits Rackets Inquiry." New York Times. April 1,
1958.
- ^
Sen. McNamara resigned after the committee's first year of
operation, and was replaced by Sen. Frank Church. See: Witwer,
Corruption and Reform in the Teamsters Union, 2003.
- ^
Sen. Joseph McCarthy served until his death on May 2, 1957. He was
replaced by Sen. Carl T. Curtis. See: Lee, Eisenhower &
Landrum-Griffin: A Study in Labor-management Politics,
1990.
Further
reading
- Hearings before the Select Committee on Improper Activities
in the Labor or Management Field. 85th Congress, 1st session,
1957; 85th Congress, 2nd session, 1958; and 86th Congress, 1st
Session, 1959.
- Kennedy, Robert F. The Enemy Within: The McClellan
Committee's Crusade Against Jimmy Hoffa and Corrupt Labor
Unions. New York: Harper and Row, 1960.
- McClellan, John L. Crime Without Punishment. New York:
Duell, Sloan and Pearce, 1962.
- Petro, Sylvester. Power Unlimited: The Corruption of Union
Leadership: A Report on the McClellan Committee Hearings. New
York: Ronald Press, 1959.
External
links