The "Watchdog" Agency: Fighting Organized Crime
Transcription
The "Watchdog" Agency: Fighting Organized Crime
The "Watchdog" Agency: Fighting Organized Crime on the Waterfront in New York and New Jersey Michelle J. Demeri* I. INTRODUCTION The attention paid to dock workers started in 1949, when Malcolm Johnson wrote a series of articles appearing in the New York Sun highlighting the infiltration of organized crime on the New York-New Jersey Waterfront (the Waterfront).1 These dockworkers worked along the Waterfront for decades, but operated in the shadows of a society dependant on their labor, which included the movement of food, clothing, and other essential goods in and out of the port. These longshoremen worked for an honest pay, but were overshadowed by the crooks, thieves, loansharks, gamblers, and the "bosses" that controlled it all-the mob. Johnson's articles were followed by the film On the Waterfront, which won eight Academy Awards. 2 In the film, Marlon Brando plays Terry Malloy, a former boxer turned longshoreman, 3 who is given a "no-show" * Assistant Counsel at the Waterfront Commission of New York Harbor (WCNYH). B.A., 2004, Clark University; J.D. 2007, New England Law I Boston. The author would like to thank Chief Researcher David Byrne of the WCNYH and Special Agent Jonathan Mellone of the United States Department of Labor for their research assistance. The views represented herein do not necessarily represent the position of the Waterfront Commission or any other agency or authority. This article was produced independently by the author and all research was conducted in the free time of the parties mentioned. See generally MALCOLM JOHNSON, ON THE WATERFRONT: THE PULITZER PRIZE I. WINNING ARTICLES THAT INSPIRED THE CLASSIC FILM AND TRANSFORMED THE NEW YORK HARBOR (2005). 2. ON THE WATERFRONT (Columbia Pictures 1954); The 27th Academy Awards (1955), ACADEMY OF MOTION PICTURE ARTS AND SCIENCES, OSCARS.ORG, http://www.oscars.org/awards/academyawards/legacy/ceremony/27th.html (last visited Apr. 15, 2012). 3. See generally N.Y. UNCONSOL. § 9806 (McKinney 2002); N.J. STAT. ANN. § 32:23-6 (West 1990) (providing a definition of longshoreman). 257 258 CRIMTNAL AND CIVIL CONFINEMENT [Vol. 38:257 job by a mob-connected union boss, Johnny Friendly.4 During his career as a fighter, Malloy threw a match so that Friendly could win money betting against him. 5 Malloy, who struggles with his decision to cooperate with authorities and expose the corruption on the Waterfront, tells his brother in a memorable scene, "I coulda been a contender," referring to his boxing career had he not thrown the fight for Friendly. 6 When Malloy decides to stand up to Friendly and the organized crime influence, he is blacklisted and cannot find work anywhere on the Waterfront.7 On the Waterfront illustrates how a surplus of available labor provided mob-connected union leadership with the ability to control its membership.8 Work on the Waterfront was guaranteed only for those supportive members who agreed to "kick back" a portion of their wages.9 Shipping companies did not directly hire longshoremen because their needs were so irregular.' 0 Instead, they paid stevedore companies on a per ton basis to load and unload ships." To accommodate the shipping companies' needs, the stevedore companies developed a "shape-up system" that hired laborers on an as-needed basis.12 This system established regular gangs of men that were given first rights to jobs at the gangs' regular pier.13 It suited the needs of the shipping companies, but left the doors wide open for corrupt hiring bosses who often included an extra crew of fictitious workers.14 To ensure labor peace, which would allow their businesses to 4. ON THE WATERFRONT, supra note 2. 5. 6. Id Id. 7. 8. Id. Id 9. THE WATERFRONT COMM'N OF N.Y. HARBOR ANNUAL REPORT, 1 (2011), available at http://www.wcnyh.org/docs/WCNYH_2011_AnnualReport.pdf [hereinafter WATERFRONT REPORT]. 10. 11. Id. "Stevedore" shall also include (a) contractors [not including employees] engaged for compensation pursuant to a contract or arrangement with the United States, any state or territory thereof, of any department, division, board, commission or authority of one or more of the foregoing, in moving freight carried or consigned for carriage between any point in the port of New York district and a point outside said district on vessels of such a public agency berthed at piers, on piers at which such vessels are berthed or at other waterfront terminals. N.Y. UNCONSOL. § 9905(1)(a) (McKinney 2002), and N.J. STAT. ANN. 4 32:23-85 (West 1990). 12. See WATERFRONT REPORT, supra note 9. 13. See id. 14. Id; see also JAMES B. JACOBS, MOBSTERS, UNIONS, AND FEDS: THE MAFIA AND THE AMERICAN LABOR MOVEMENT 102 (2006). 2012] THE "WATCHDOG" AGENCY 259 prosper, "[s]tevedoring companies were forced to employ 'no-show' employees"' 5 so longshoremen would be paid even when they did not work at all. Other problems existed on the Waterfront. Public loaders, who were paid to load and unload cargo from trucks, added an unnecessary toll on the movement of goods throughout the port.16 Loansharks preyed on longshoremen who could not get enough hours of work to feed their families or who gambled away their salaries to mob-sanctioned bookmakers and cargo pilfering was rampant in the port.17 In the early 1950s, the poor working conditions at the ports of New York and New Jersey were documented through public hearings put on by the New York State Crime Commission and the New Jersey Law Enforcement Council.' 8 Part II of this Article discusses the creation and purpose of the organization that combats organized crime influence on the Waterfront and provide an overview of organized crime's influence spanning the past twenty years. Part III discusses the control the Mafia had on the Waterfront in the 1990s and 2000s and various legal cases brought against its members. Part IV analyzes different tools the Waterfront Commission uses to combat organized crime. Part V concludes that organized crime still exists on the Waterfront and that the Waterfront Commission is uniquely qualified to eradicate it. II. THE COMMISSION: CREATION, REGULATION OF WORKERS, AND UNION OVERSIGHT A. Creation and Purpose President Dwight D. Eisenhower approved a pact between New York and New Jersey that created the Waterfront Commission of New York Harbor (Waterfront Commission or WCNYH) in August of 1953.19 Part I, Article I of the Waterfront Commission Act lays out the framework for change, indicating that: The states of New York and New Jersey hereby find and declare that the conditions under which waterfront labor is employed within the port of New York district are depressing and degrading to such labor, resulting from the lack of any systematic method of hiring, ... corrupt 15. WATERFRONT REPORT, supra note 9; see also William Finnegan, Watching the Waterfront: Mobsters, Terrorists,and Docks of New York Harbor,THE NEW YORKER (June 19, 2006) at 10, availableat www.wcnyh.org/news/TNY-watching the-waterfront.pdf. 16. See WATERFRONT REPORT, supra note 9. 17. 18. Id. WATERFRONT REPORT, supra note 9. Id.; see also JACOBS, supra note 14, at 13-14. 19. CRIMINAL AND CIVIL CONFINEMENT 260 [Vol. 38:257 hiring practice and the fact that persons conducting such hiring are frequently criminals and persons notoriously lacking in moral character and integrity and neither responsive or responsible to the employers nor to the uncoerced will of the majority of the members of the labor organizations of the employees; that as a result waterfront laborers suffer from irregularity of employment, fear and insecurity, inadequate earnings, an unduly high accident rate, subjection to borrowing at usurious rates of interest, exploitation and extortion as the price of securing employment and a loss of respect for the law; that not only does there result a destruction of the dignity of an important segment of American labor, but a direct encouragement of crime which imposes a levy of greatly increased costs on food, fuel and other necessaries handled in and through the port of New York district.20 The pact gave a tremendous amount of responsibility to the Commission. The Waterfront Commission has two commissioners, each appointed by the respective governor of New York and New Jersey. 21 Each commissioner serves a term of three years and can only act by unanimous vote of both members. 22 Less than one hundred people are employed by the WCNYH, divided among seven divisions: Executive, Law, Licensing and Employment Information Centers, Police, Intelligence, Administration and Audit, and Information and Technology. 23 It is funded by a maximum 2% assessment on covered waterfront employees, paid by employers. 24 The WCNYH's mandate is "to investigate, deter, combat and remedy criminal activity and influence in the Port of New York and New Jersey, and to ensure fair hiring and employment practices so that the port and region can grow and prosper." 2 5 The WCNYH has various general powers to fulfill its mandate including, but not limited to the power: To administer and enforce the provisions of this compact; 26 To make and enforce such rules and regulations as the commission may deem necessary to effectuate the purposes of this compact or to prevent 20. N.Y. UNCONSOL. § 9802 (McKinney 2002); accord N.J. STAT. ANN. § 32:23-2 (West 1990); see also Alan A. Block, "On the Waterfront" Revisited: The Criminology of Waterfront Organized Crime, 6 CONTEMP. CRISES 373, 383 (1982). 21. WATERFRONT REPORT, supra note 9, at 3. 22. N.Y. OFFICE OF THE INSPECTOR GEN., INVESTIGATION OF THE WATERFRONT COMM'N OF N.Y. HARBOR 6 (2009), availableat http://www.centerforinvestigativereporting. org/files/stateprofiles/newyork/newyorkwaterfront.pdf. 23. WATERFRONT REPORT, supra note 9, at 5-6. 24. Id. 25. 26. Id. at 1. N.Y. UNCONSOL. LAW § 9810(6) (McKinney 2002); N.J. STAT. ANN. § 32:23- 10(6) (West Supp. 2011) 2012] THE "WATCHDOG" AGENCY 261 the circumvention or evasion thereof ... ;27 [T]o . . . issue subpoenas throughout both states to compel the attendance of witnesses and the giving of testimony and the production of other evidence; 28 To have . . . full and free access, ingress and egress to and from all vessels, piers and other waterfront terminals ... for the purposes of making inspection or enforcing the provisions of this compact . . . .;29 To make investigations, collect and compile information concerning waterfront practices .. . . To advise and consult with representatives of labor and industry and with public officials and a encies ... upon all matters which the commission may desire ... .; To co-operate with and receive from any department, division, bureau, board, commission, or agency of either or both States ... such assistance and data as will enable it properly to carry out its powers and duties hereunder; 32 [I]ssue a temporary permit to any prospective licensee for a license. 33 These powers enabled the Commission to make many positi ve changes on the waterfront and in the shipping industry. B. Regulation of Workers To combat the "depressing and degrading" conditions on the Waterfront, the Waterfront Commission expelled public loaders from the port and implemented a hiring system that licensed longshoremen and assigned them work, replacing the corrupt "shape-up system." 34 To obtain registration with the WCNYH, longshoremen, maintenance men, and warehousemen cannot be a danger to the public's peace and safety. 35 These 27. 28. 29. 30. 31. 32. 33. N.Y. UNCONSOL. LAW § 9810(7); N.J. STAT. ANN. § 32:23-10(7). N.Y. UNCONSOL. LAW § 9810(8); N.J. STAT. ANN. § 32:23-10(8). N.Y. UNCONSOL. LAW § 9810(9); N.J. STAT. ANN. § 32:23-10(9). N.Y. UNCONsOL. LAW § 98 10(11); N.J. STAT. ANN. § 32:23-10(11). N.Y. UNCONSOL. LAW § 9810(12); N.J. STAT. ANN. § 32:23-10(12). N.Y. UNCONSOL. LAW § 9810(14); N.J. STAT. ANN. § 32:23-10(14). N.Y. UNCONSOL. LAW § 9815; N.J. STAT. ANN. § 32:23-15. JACOBS, supra note 14, at 14. 35. See N.Y. UNCONSOL. LAW §§ 9831, 9841-44 (McKinney 2002); N.Y. UNCONSOL. LAW § 9912-13 (McKinney Supp. 2012). 34. 262 CRIMINAL AND CIVIL CONFINEMENT [Vol. 38:257 workers must obtain a license or registration to work.3 6 The WCNYH requires any applicant for a license or registration to furnish facts and evidence to enable it to determine whether to grant the license or registration.3 7 Pier superintendents, checkers,3 8 hiring agents, port watchmen, and stevedore companies must have Iood character and integrity in order to obtain licenses with the WCNYH. 9 The WCNYH can suspend or revoke licenses and registations for not meeting these standards. 40 Reasons for the denial or revocation of a license or registration include, but are not limited to: committing fraud, deceit, or misrepresentation in securing a license or registration, or in the conduct of the licensed activity; violations of the compact; illegal drug use or trafficking; convictions of a felony, high misdemeanor, or illegally using, carrying, or possessing a dangerous weapon; making or possessing burglar's instruments; buying or receiving stolen property; unlawful entry into a building; or aiding an escape from prison.4 1 If an applicant is convicted of a felony, high misdemeanor, or any of the other crimes discussed above, it is not an automatic bar from licensure or registration. 4 2 Rather, the applicant, licensee, or registrant may submit evidence to the Waterfront Commission that he has, for a period of not less than five years, 43 conducted himself according to the applicable standard: either good character and integrity or that he has not been a danger to public peace and safety." The Waterfront Commission will consider this evidence and can issue an order removing N.Y. UNCONSOL. LAW §§ 9812-14 (McKinney 2001); N.Y. UNCONSOL. LAW 991236. 13 (McKinney Supp. 2012). 37. See § 9813; N.J. STAT. ANN. § 32:23-13 (West 1990). 38. "Checker" shall mean a longshoreman who is employed to engage in direct and immediate checking of waterbome freight or of the custodial accounting thereof or in the recording or tabulation of the hours worked at piers or other waterfront terminals by natural persons employed by carriers of freight by water or stevedores. N.Y. UNCONSOL. § 9905(5) (McKinney 2002), and N.J. STAT. ANN. § 32:23-85 (West 1990). 39. See N.Y. UNCONSOL. §§ 9812-14, 9841-44 (McKinney 2002); N.Y. UNCONSOL. § 9912-13 (McKinney Supp. 2012); see also §§ 32:1-35:78. N.Y. UNCONSOL. §§ 9831; N.J. STAT. ANN. § 32:1-35:78 (West 1990). 40. 41. N.Y. UNCONSOL. § 9818 (McKinney Supp. 2012). N.Y. UNCONSOL. § 9821 (McKinney 2002). 42. 43. Id The five year period can be measured either from the date of payment of any fine imposed upon such person, the suspension of sentence, or unsupervised release. Id. 44. N.Y. UNCONSOL. § 9821 (McKinney 2002); N.J. STAT. ANN. § 32:23-105 (West Supp. 2011). 2012] THE "WATCHDOG" AGENCY 263 such ineligibility. 4 5 The Waterfront Commission cannot deny any application for a license or registration without giving the applicant, licensee, or registrant reasonable prior notice and an opportunity to be heard.4 6 These administrative hearings are held at the Commission's offices before an administrative law judge.47 The standard of proof is a preponderance of the evidence and decisions can only be overturned if the Waterfront Commission acted in an arbitrary and capricious manner. 48 In cases where a licensee or registrant has been indicted for or otherwise charged with a felony or indictable offense, the Waterfront Commission may suspend a license or registration pending the results of a hearing. 49 Specifically, the amended laws indicate that a license or registration can be denied or revoked based on: Association with a person who is identified by a federal, state, or local law enforcement agency as a member or associate of an organized crime group, terrorist group, or a career offender cartel, or who is a career offender under circumstances where such association creates a reasonable belief that the participation of the applicant in any activity required to be licensed (or registered) under this act would be inimical to the policies of this act.50 After September 11, 2001, the existing grounds for denial or revocation of licenses or registrations were too restrictive on the Waterfront Commission. There was a growing need to protect the ports from unsavory characters, leading to the enactment of this bill.5 Since 2008, the Waterfront Commission has issued notices of hearings and subsequently charged applicants, licensees, and registrants with association, pursuant to the statute. 52 Many have withdrawn their applications rather than face the 45. 46. N.Y. UNCONSOL. § 9821; N.J. STAT. ANN. § 32:23-105 (West Supp. 2011). See N.Y. UNCONSOL. §§ 9845, 9847 (McKinney 2002); N.J. STAT. ANN. § 32:23- 46 to 52 (West 1990 & Supp. 2011). 47. N.Y. UNCONSOL. § 9849 (McKinney 2002); N.J. STAT. ANN. § 32:23-49 (West Supp. 2011). 48. CC Lumber Co., Inc. v. Waterfront Comm'n of N.Y. Harbor, 292 N.E.2d 1, 6 (N.Y. 1972). 49. N.Y. UNCONSOL. § 9848 (McKinney 2002); N.J. STAT. ANN. § 32:23-48 (West Supp. 2011). 50. N.Y. UNCONsOL. §§ 9912, 9913 (McKinney Supp. 2012); N.J. STAT. ANN. §§ 32:23-92 to 93 (West Supp. 2011). 51. S. 189, 21Ith Leg. (N.J. 2005). 52. See infra Part III.D.3; see Press Release, Waterfront Comm'n of N.Y Harbor, NJ Superior Court Upholds Waterfront Comm'n Subpoena of Longshoreman (June 10, 2011), http://www/wcnyh.org/newspaper59.html. CRIMINAL AND CIVIL CONFINEMENT 264 [Vol. 38.:257 charges. 53 C. Union Oversight The Waterfront Commission has limited oversight of the union and may not interfere with the collective bargaining agreement-the labor contract between the employer and the union.5 4 However, the Waterfront Commission Act prohibits any person who has been convicted of a felony, high misdemeanor, or misdemeanor of moral turpitude from serving as an officer, agent, or employee of any union which represents employees licensed by the Commission. s There are exceptions that could remove this prohibition. One exception allows officials and employees who have received a pardon by the governor or another appropriate authority in the state the conviction was received and another enables persons who have received a certificate of good conduct from the board of parole. 56 III. MOB CONTROL ON THE WATERFRONT A. Understanding the Union The International Longshoreman's Association (ILA), created in 1892, is the largest union of maritime workers in North America, representing upwards of 65,000 longshoremen. 57 This union includes the longshoremen who work at the ports of New York and New Jersey. 58 Since its inception, the mob has corrupted various legitimate institutions that operate on the Waterfront, including ILA officials and stevedore companies. 59 Loansharking, gambling, and theft as well as the infiltration, domination, or use of a union or employee benefit plan for personal benefit by illegal, violent, or fraudulent means-commonly referred to as labor 53. Joseph Fisch, Office of the Inspector Gen., Investigation of the Waterfront Commission of New York Harbor 16 (2009), availableat http://www.ig.state.ny.us/pdfs/ Investigation%20of/o2Othe%2OWaterfront%20Commission%20of%2ONew%2OYork%20H arbor.pdf. N.Y. UNCONSOL. §§ 9868 to 9869 (McKinney 2002); N.J. STAT. ANN. §§ 32:23-68 54. to 69 (West 1990). See N.Y. UNCONSOL. § 9933 (McKinney 2002); N.J. STAT. ANN. §§ 32:23-80 55. (West 1990). N.Y. UNCONSOL. § 9933; N.J. STAT. ANN. § 32:23-80. 56. Welcome, International Longshoreman Association, ILAUNION.ORG (2010), 57. http://www.ilaunion.org/index.html (last visited on April 27, 2012). See id. 58. See Battling Corruption in the ILA: A Partial Chronology, UNION DEMOCRACY 59. REv. (Ass'n for Union Democracy, Brooklyn, N.Y.), Aug. 2005, available at http://www.uniondemocracy.org/UDR/97-attling%20corruption%20in%20the%20ILA.htm; see generally Finnegan,supra note 15. 2012] THE "WATCHDOG" AGENCY 265 racketeering-are among crimes perpetrated by the mob through corruption of legitimate institutions.6 0 These labor racketeers determined who worked on the Waterfront and how fast ships were loaded and unloaded. 61 They collected "payoffs" for jobs, extorted stevedore companies, facilitated cargo theft, and siphoned benefit-funds. 62 Unable, or in some cases unwilling, to fight organized crime, some companies considered payoffs, missing cargo, and employin "no-show" workers to be the cost of conducting business in the port. Unions were created to give workers a platform for issues experienced at work like wage increases or paid sick leave, 64 but the ILA was plagued by years of corruption. 65 Headlines stating that union officials and members were providing "kick-backs" to organized crime made it hard for the public to believe that "fairness [exists] for all working people." 66 In addition, the cost of labor racketeering was passed to the consumer.67 In 1952, Spruille Braden, Chairman of the New York City Anti-Crime Committee, declared that "organized crime along the waterfront costs at least $350 million a year in hidden taxes." 68 By "hidden taxes," Braden was referring to the "mob tax," part of which was passed on to the consumer through higher prices. 69 Braden's formula shows that five percent of the $7 billion worth of goods that passed through the ports in 1952 was stolen.70 Today, 60. See WATERFRONT REPORT, supra note 9, at 2. 61. See JACOBS, supra note 14, at 49. 62. See id. at 51. 63. See JACOBS, supra note 14, at 51; Alan A. Block, "On the Waterfront" Revisited: The Criminology of Waterfront OrganizedCrime, 6 CONTEMP. CRISEs 373, 375 (1982). This was not an issue for public welfare as it concerned mainly the dockworkers and their families. Companies paying the "mob tax" and the occurrence of illicit activity was contained within the industry so the public-at-large did not have reason for concern. Finnegan, supra note 15. See AFL-CIO, What Unions Do, AFLCIO.ORG, http://www.aflcio.org/Learn64. About-Unions/What-Unions-Do (last visited Mar. 24, 2012). 65. Battling Corruptionin the ILA: A PartialChronology,supra note 59. 66. E.g., Thomas Zambito, Waterfront Shakedowns N.J. Union Leaders Face Charges in Docks Scam, N.Y. DAILY NEWS (Mar. 8, 2002), http://articles.nydailynews.com/2002-0308/news/1819841 1global-terminal-p-o-ports-bayonne; see AFL-CIO, supranote 63. 67. G. Robert Blakey & Ronald Goldstock, "On the Waterfront ": RICO and Labor Racketeering 17 AM. CRIM. L. REV. 341, 342 (1980). 68. Dock Rackets' Cost Put at $350,000,000, N.Y. TIMES, Nov. 8, 1952, at 29 (on file with author). 69. Id; see Larry McShane, On the Waterfront, in the Courtroom; StoriedNew Jersey Union Local Faces Another Racketeering Trial This Spring, WASH. PosT, Jan. 4, 2004, at A10. 70. Dock Rackets' Cost Put at $350,000,000, supra note 68. CRIMINAL AND CIVIL CONFINEMENT 266 [Vol. 38:257 "[r]oughly $200 billion in cargo moves through the port each year." 71 B. Structure of the Mob The Mafia is an organization of five families in the New York-New Jersey area. 72 These families represent organized criminal factions headed by "captains." 73 These factions are referred to as "crews." 74 The crews are made up of "soldiers" or "made" members and "associates. "7 5 Each captain is responsible for supervising, supporting, and protecting his crew. 7 "In return, the captain receives a share of the crew's earnings."77 The head of the family is referred to as the "boss." 78 The boss of the family is assisted by the "underboss" and a "consigliere." 7 9 With the assistance of the underboss and the consigliere, the boss is responsible for setting policy, resolving disputes between family members and members of other factions, and approving all significant actions taken by the family.8 0 When an official boss, underboss, consigliere, or captain became incarcerated, another member of the family is temporarily appointed to the vacant -81 position. C. Dividing the Waterfront In the late 1960s, George Barone organized a mob sit-down at the docks. 82 Barone, once a member of the Jets, would later become a made member of the Genovese crime family and an ILA official.83 As a result of the sit-down, the Waterfront was divided: the Gambino family operated Brooklyn and Staten Island and the Genovese family operated Manhattan 71. Tom Hester Sr., Joseph Queli of Wall Gets 5 Years in Prison for Waterfront Loansharking,NEWJERSEYNEwSRooM.COM (Feb. 10, 2012), http://www.newjersey newsroom.com/state/joseph-queli-of-wall-gets-5-years-in-prison-for-waterfrontloansharking/page-2. 72. Indictment at 2-3, United States v. Gotti, S1 02 Cr. 743 (RCC) (S.D.N.Y 2004). This "nationwide criminal organization known by various names, including the 'Mafia' and 'La Cosa Nostra' ('LCN'), operated through entities known as 'Families."' Id. 73. Id. at 3. 74. 75. Id. Id. 76. Id. 77. 78. Id. 79. 80. Id. at 3-4. Id. at 4. 81. 82. 83. Id Id. Id. Id. 2012]) THE "WATCHDOG" AGENCY 267 and New Jersey. 84 This balance of power allowed organized crime to infiltrate the Waterfront for decades. 85 However, the ILA continues to deny the level of mob infiltration that exists on the Waterfront. 86 According to its website, the ILA purports that the level of mob infiltration has "never even remotely approached the elaborate plots designed in the artists' minds. It is ... never to the extent that first Hollywood and later the press would have the public believe," but is rather a "gangland myth."87 In 2010, legislation was proposed in New Jersey, calling for the dissolution of the Commission, challenging its continued existence on the grounds that the purpose for which the Waterfront Commission was created no longer exists.8 8 Prior to proposing this legislation, Thomas Leonardis, then-President of ILA Local 1235, testified before the New Jersey State Senate Economic Growth Committee that the Waterfront Commission was as obsolete as a loading hook. 89 Leonardis was later arrested for extorting ILA members. 90 Without the presence of the WCNYH working together with other agencies to fight back against the influence of organized crime on the Waterfront, the labor racketeers would be free to control the union and the Waterfront without outside interference. 9 1 D. The Past Twenty Years of Corruption The enactment of the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations (RICO) statute in 1970 has impacted the prosecution of labor racketeering cases. 92 RICO, which prohibits racketeering activities "defined by Id. 84. 85. McShane, supra note 69. 86. History: Struggle and Changes, ILAUNION.ORG, http://www.ilaunion.org/history struggle.html (last visited Jan. 31, 2012); see Ted Sherman, Tale of the Docks and Mobsters Gets New Life, N.J. STAR LEDGER (May 1, 2005), http://www.wcnyh.org/news/Tale of DocksandMobstersget newlife.pdf ("'There is no mob influence in the union,' said ILA spokesman James McNamara."). History: Struggle and Changes, supra note 86. 87. 88. S. 2360, 214th Leg. (N.J. 2010) (discussing purpose as combating criminal activity, specifically organized crime, on the ports). 89. Timothy J. Carroll, Waterfront Hearing,Lesniak on Politics: "Maybe We Need a Waterfront Commission, "POLITICKERNJ.COM (Sept. 23, 2010), http://www.politickernj.com /hearing-waterfront-oversight-lesniak-politics-maybe-we-need-waterfront-commission. 90. Press Release, District of N.J., E.D.N.Y., Genovese Organized Crime Family Soldier and Associates Indicted on Racketeering Charges, Including Extortion of Int'l Longshoremen's Ass'n Members (Jan. 20, 2011), http://www.wcnyh.org/news.html. 91. Press Release, Waterfront Comm'n of N.Y. Harbor, Why Kill the Mob Watchdog at the Port (Oct. 10, 2010), http://www.wcnyh.org/newspage41.html; see also Finnegan, supra note 17. 92. See Blakey, supra note 67, at 349. CRIMINAL AND CIVIL CONFINEMENT 208 [Vol. 38:257 reference to twenty-four separate types of federal crimes and eight different state felonies," is an important statutory weapon used by federal prosecutors against labor racketeering. 93 The statute does not make illegal any action that was previously legal, but rather, "adds the concept of 'enterprise' to a criminal prosecution, requiring additional proof of a 'pattern' of racketeering activity and its relationship to an 'enterprise' in addition to that required to prove the individual crimes alleged." 94 1. 1990s On February 14, 1990, a federal civil RICO suit was filed against six ILA unions. 95 Various union and management officials were named in the suit and many of them were charged with being connected to organized crime. 96 Two years later, a settlement was reached under a consent decree with the unions agreeing to "clean up their act."9 7 As a result of this suit, six ILA unions were placed under federal monitorships.9 8 Thirteen years after the filing of the suit, a federal trusteeship was imposed on Local 1588 after it violated the consent decree. 99 Those who were identified as "mob figures" were enjoined from associating with the ILA.' 0 0 In 1994, at a social club in Brooklyn, New York, Michael "Cookie" D'Urso, a Genovese crime family associate, was shot in the head.' 0 ' He survived, became a law enforcement cooperator, and aided in convicting other organized crime figures, including former Genovese crime family boss, Vincent "Chin" Gigante.1 02 D'Urso recorded conversations between himself and fellow Genovese crime family associate Thomas Cafaro, who was also a union employee and the son of Vincent "Fish" Cafaro. The conversations of Cafaro and D'Urso highlighted that the mob controlled the Waterfront through the union:103 93. Id. at 348. 94. Id. at 348-49. Blakey and Goldstock's famous article promotes RICO as an important statutory weapon used against labor racketeering. They discuss how RICO can best attack various labor rackets including fringe benefit misuse, "sweetheart" contracts, strike insurance, and racketeering in illicit business. See id at 342-46. 95. Battling Corruption in the ILA: A PartialChronology,supra note 59. 96. Id. 97. Id. 98. Id 99. Id 100. Id 101. See Michael Brick, Jury Rules One Way, Judge Another in Mob Killing, N.Y. TIMES (Dec. 15, 2007), http://www.nytimes.com/2007/12/15/nyregion/15mob.html. 102. Id. 103. See Government Exhibit T4, Transcript of Conversation between Michael "Cookie" D'Urso and Thomas Cafaro, Mar. 23, 2000, 14:48:33-14:50:00 (on file with 2012] THE "WA TCHDOG" AGENCY 269 CAFARO: I told our friend.. . "[W]e got to do the repair, container repair, chassis repair, store them and charge a rent and the trucking." . . . DURSO: And what did he say? CAFARO: "You're right." DURSO: What happens if legitimate guys come in and do it? Then what? CAFARO: They give them a hard time with the union. You know what I mean? DURSO: They'll sick them on them? CAFARO: Yeah, they'll give them a hard time with the union ... 104 In 1998, various Genovese crime family members, and WCNYH registrants, were indicted in the District of New Jersey on charges of racketeering, illegal gambling, and loan sharking. 0 5 The indictment alleged that Joseph Queli, a maintenance foreman and alleged "made member" of the Genovese crime family, ran a crew responsible for loansharking and gambling activities on the Waterfront. 106 Members of the crew included Ronald "Quack" Quacquarini (warehouseman and shop steward), Anthony Napolitano, (warehouseman and assistant shop steward), Anthony "Skins" Stoia, Raymond "Ronni" Cardosa (assistant clinic administrator at the ILA Medical Clinic in Newark, New Jersey), Louis Raimo, Stephen DePiro, and Manny Rodriguez. 107 DePiro and Rodriguez were previously revoked by the Commission: DePiro in 1996 for engaging in a gambling conspiracy and promoting gambling and Rodriquez in 1993 for aggravated assault and promoting gambling.' 08 Queli and DePiro were convicted of racketeering.109 Stoia and Cardosa were convicted of illegal gambling."10 author). 104. Id 105. See Tom Baldwin, Latest Commission Mob Investigations Lead to Indictments, J. OF COM. (1998), at 2B. 106. Baldwin, supra note 105. 107. Press Release, Waterfront Comm'n of N.Y. Harbor, Three Waterfront Workers Suspended (Apr. 22, 1998); see Baldwin, supra note 105. 108. Baldwin, supra note 105. 109. Id. 110. Id. CRIMINAL AND CIVIL CONFINEMENT 270 2. [Vol. 38:257 2000s In 2000, two former Presidents of Local 1588, John "John John" Angelone and Eugene G'Sell pled guilty to conspiracy to embezzle from the Union."'1 Office Manager Denise Bohn, former Local 1588 Business Agent William Hurley, former Local 1588 Vice President Joseph Pelliccia, and former union environmental officer Thomas Rackley were convicted of embezzlement and conspiracy. 112 One year later Joseph Lore, a hiring agent and Genovese soldier who controlled ILA Local 1588 in the 1990s was convicted of embezzling $750,000 from union workers." 3 During Lore's reign, he collected one-half of all officers' and s ecific union The Gotti employees' salaries in a "salary diversion scheme."" convictions in United States v. Gotti included Peter Gotti, acting boss of the Gambino crime family and ILA officials Anthony "Sonny" Ciccone and Frank "Red" Scollo. 5 The Bellomo convictions included Genovese acting bosses Liborio Bellomo, Ernest Muscarella, and Andrew Gigante, the owner of several waterfront businesses.11 6 In 2003, Bellomo, Muscarella, and Gigante entered into consent decrees barring them from waterfront businesses and from any involvement with the ILA or its benefit funds." 7 In 2002, current and former officials of Local 1588 were charged with racketeering, extortion, bribery, and conspiracy by the State of New Jersey." 8 All were reputed associates of the Genovese crime family.119 Among those charged were Nicholas Furina (hiring agent for Ports America), Ralph Esposito (shop steward for Local 1588 at Global Terminal), Anthony D'Errico (field boss for Local 1588 at Global Terminal), Aniello "Sonny" Bello (hiring agent at Global Terminal), John Timpanaro (president of Local 1588), Carlo Bilancione (former field boss for Local 1588 at Global Terminal), and Nicholas Romano (former shop steward for Local 1588 at Global Terminal and Nicholas Furina's son-in- 111. See McShane, supra note 69. 112. Five Guilty in ILA Skimming Case, J. OF COM. (Dec. 19, 2001). 113. McShane, supra note 69. 114. Five Guilty in ILA Skimming Case, supra note 112. 115. See Joseph Bonney, Feds target the ILA, J. OF COM. (Oct. 18, 2004), at 32; Press Release, Dep't of Justice, U.S. Files Racketeering Case Against the ILA and Top ILA Officials (July 6, 2005). 116. Bonney, supra note 115. 117. Sherman, supra note 86. 118. Press Release, Waterfront Comm'n of N.Y. Harbor, Reputed Waterfront Faction of the Genovese Crime Family & Dock Worker's Union Demand $$$, For Work-Seven Arrested in Early Morning Roundup (Mar. 7, 2002), availableat http://www.wcnyh.org/ news/DCJTarget%20Mob-run%20shake-down%20on%20NJ%20docks.pdf. 119. Id. THE "WATCHDOG" AGENCY 2012] 271 law).120 Bilancione and Romano had their registration revoked by the Commission after they pled guilty to conspiracy to steal an interstate shipment of goods in connection with the theft of $2 million of imported perfume from Global Terminals in 2000.121 In 2005, Bello, Esposito, and Romano, pled guilty to commercial bribery.122 Furina, who was accused of being the boss behind the mob-related shakedown scheme, pled guilty to theft.123 Following these pleas and after decades of mob control, the federal government finally imposed a trustee over Local 1588.124 In 2010, Furina's son's and grandson's licenses were revoked by the WCNYH in separate hearings for lacking the requisite good character and integrity to be pier superintendents.1 25 In 2004, Louis Saccenti, former driver for Sammy "the Bull" Gravano, turned ILA official and Gambino associate, pled not guilty to a perjury charge after denying that he knew Primo Cassarino, a Gambino soldier, and that he visited the Ravenite Social Club, a hangout frequented by former Gambino boss John Gotti.126 Between 1981 and 1996, Saccenti met with thirty-eight Gambino family members at the Ravenite and other mob hangouts.1 27 In 1998, the Waterfront Commission revoked his license,12 8 but the union kept him on the payroll.12 9 Also in 2004, ILA officials Harold Daggett, Arthur Coffey, and Albert Cernadas were charged with extortion and fraud for a scheme aimed at steering union benefit contracts to 120. Id. 121. Michael Nelson, Two New Jersey Bosses Plead Guilty to $2 Million Perfume Heist, NATIONAL LEGAL & POLICY CENTER (Sept. 25, 2010), http://nlpc.org/stories/2000/09/ 25/two-new-jersey-bosses-plead-guilty-2-million-perfume-heist. 122. Ronald Leir, "Dirty Docker" License Targeted, JERSEY J., Apr. 29, 2005, availableat www.wcnyh.org/news.Dirty-Docker-lincense-targeted.pdf. 123. Joe Malinconico, Something is Missing in the Union Vote: The Mob, N.J. STARLEDGER, Apr. 8, 2007; Ronald Smothers, US. Wants Overseerfor Dock Workers' Local, N.Y. TIMEs (Dec. 11, 2002), http://www.nytimes.com/2002/12/11/nyregion/us-wantsoverseer-for-dock-workers-local.html. 124. McShane, supra note 69. 125. Press Release, Waterfront Comm'n of N.Y. Harbor, Pier Superintendent's License is Revoked for Dishonesty During Waterfront Comm'n Interview and Hearing (May 17, 2010), http://www.wcnyh.org/newspage34.html; see also Press Release, Waterfront Comm'n of N.Y. Harbor, Pier Superintendent Permit Revoked for Violation of the Waterfront Comm'n Act (July 19, 2010), http://www.wenyh.org/newspage37.html. 126. Jerry Capeci, Tony L, Mob Royalty, N.Y. SuN, July 15, 2004, at 3. 127. Douglas Feiden, The Fat Cats on the Waterfront: How Bosses Load Up on Pay Despite Their Ever-Shrinking Union, N.Y. DAILY NEWS (Jan. 4, 2004), http://articles.nydailynews.com/2004-01-04/news/1 8264235_lila-nonunion-competitionjohn-bowers. 128. 129. Id. Id CRIMINAL AND CIVIL CONFINEMENT 272 [Vol. 38:257 companies that paid kickbacks to the mob from 1997 to 2004.130 Genovese crime family captain and former business agent of ILA Local 1235, Lawrence Ricci, was also charged.131 George Barone, then in his eighties and a government witness, testified against them at trial, indicating that the mob put Daggett in power.132 Ultimately, Cernadas pled guilty to fraud.133 Daggett, Coffey, and Ricci were acquitted on all charges. 134 Ricci went missing during the trial and was later found dead in the trunk of a car.135 Daggett went on to become the President of the ILA.136 In 2005, a federal civil RICO suit was filed against the ILA calling for the removal of corrupt officers and for federal monitoring over the entire union. 137 A press release by the Eastern District of New York indicated that the charges against the ILA were "based on decades of evidence relating to corruption and organized crime influence within the union and businesses" operating on the Waterfront.1 38 The case is still pending.139 In 2009, Michael "Mikey Cigars" Coppola, a Genovese crime family captain, was convicted on federal racketeering charges that included conspiracy to extort money from ILA Local 1235 and its members.1 40 He was sentenced to sixteen years in prison, but not before he could wish the judge and his family a "Merry Christmas."1 4 1 Included in the evidence 130. Press Release, Waterfront Comm'n of N.Y. Harbor, U.S. Files Racketeering Case Against Int'l Longshoremen's Ass'n and Top ILA Officials (July 6, 2005), http://www.justice.gov/usao/nye/pr/2005/2005jul6.html. 131. See John Marzulli, Probationfor Ex Docks Big, N.Y. DAILY NEWS (Feb. 23, 2006), http://articles.nydailynews.com/2006-02-23/local/18322641_1_lawrence-ricci-mobinfluence-genovese. 132. Sherman, supra note 86; Bonney, supra note 115. 133. William Rashbaum, Three Longshoremen Not Guilty ofFraudand Other Charges, N.Y. TIMES (Nov. 9, 2005), http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9C00 E2D8153EF93AA35752C IA9639C8B63. 134. Id. 135. William K. Rashbaum, Body Found in Car is Said to be Mob Figure's, N.Y. TIMES (Dec. 1, 2005), http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9BO7EFDC 153 1F932 35751CIA9639C8B63. 136. Harold Daggett Elected International President at ILA 53rd Quadrennial Convention, ILAUNION.ORG (July 29, 2011), www.ilaunion.org/newselection20 11 announcement.html. 137. See Tiffany Ten Eyck, Racketeering Lawsuit Againt ILA Leaders Must Give Members Control, LABOR NOTES (June 30, 2005), http://labornotes.org/node/796. 138. Press Release, supra note 130. 139. Id. 140. Kati Cornell, "Mikey Cigars" Convicted of Racketeering, Cleared of Murder, N.Y. PosT (July 21, 2009), http://www.nypost.com/news/regional/brooklyn/item-TfliPo7hy sFzueOxzcvl6TK. 141. John Marzulli, Judge Slaps Michael "Mikey Cigars" Coppola with 16 Years in THE "WA TCHDOG" AGENCY 2012] 273 presented at the Coppola trial, was an FBI intercept of a 2007 conversation between the mobster and Edward Aulisi, then a checker on the Waterfront, member of ILA Local 1, and son of Vincent Aulisi, former President of ILA Local 1235, in which they discussed extorting union members.142 At the time of the conversation, Coppola was a fugitive from justice, wanted in connection with the 1977 murder of John "Johnny Cokes" Lardiere.1 43 Aulisi was expelled by the Ethical Practices Counsel of the ILA for failing to answer questions associated with the conversation with Coppola and was removed from the Waterfront for associating with a member of organized crime. 144 3. Recent developments On March 16, 2010, Roy Maglori, a registered maintenance man, was removed by the Waterfront Commission for his association with organized crime.14 5 In a conversation between Maglori and Angelo "the Horn" Prisco, a captain in the Genovese crime family, Maglori complained about his position. 146 Prisco directed Maglori to see "Nicky" or his son, "Anthon' because they "know you're my friend" and "they'll take care of you." Prisco was sentenced to life in prison after being found guilty of racketeering, murder, and other charges.148 Also, in 2010, hiring agent John Santore's license was withdrawn by the stevedore company he worked for after he and the company were served with a notice of hearing alleging that he associated with Joseph "Joey the Bull" Bilotti, a known soldier in the Gambino crime family.149 In April 2010, a joint investigation by the New Jersey Department of Criminal Justice and the WCNYH led to the arrest of Genovese crime PrisonRacketeering, N.Y. DAILY NEWS (Dec. 19, 2009), http://articles.nydailynews.com/ 2009-12-19/news/i 7943070_1_merry-christmas-racketeering-sentence. Jerry Capeci, Encoded Lips Sink "Mikey Cigars," N.Y. SUN (May 24, 2007), 142. http://www.nysun.com.new-york/encoded-lips-sink-mikey-cigars/55136/. 143. Id. Press Release, Waterfront Comm'n of N.Y. Harbor, Checker Removed from 144. Waterfront for Association with Organized Crime (Nov. 18, 2009), http://www.wcnyh.org/newspage27.html. Press Release, Waterfront Comm'n of New York Harbor, Maintenance Man 145. Removed from Waterfront for Association with a Member of Organized Crime (Mar. 16, 2010), http://www.wcnyh.org/newspage40.html. 146. Id. 147. Id. 148. Id. Press Release, Waterfront Comm'n of N.Y. Harbor, Hiring Agent Charged with 149. Associating with Member of Organized Crime is Removed from Waterfront (Apr. 7, 2010), http://www.wcnyh.org/news/newspage30.pdf. 274 CRIMINAL AND CIVIL CONFINEMENT [Vol. 38:257 family soldier, Joseph Queli and others. 150 The investigations were referred to as "Operation Terminal" and involved allegations that "ILA members working at the shipping terminals are required to make a cash 'tribute' payment at Christmas time each year [to members of organized crime] out of year-end bonuses [] called 'container royalty checks."'is5 On October 28, 2011, Queli led guilty to loansharking, money laundering, and filing false tax returns.' 52 In pleading guilty, Queli stated he made loans to ILA members at usurious interest rates, ranging from 78 to 156% per year.153 Queli was sentenced to five years in state prison.154 In connection with the same case, checker Nicholas Bergamotto, who was temporarily suspended by the Waterfront Commission pending a hearing based on those charges, 155 was sentenced to a term of probation for money laundering.1 56 Queli, or Bergamotto acting on his behalf, would demand weekly payments from the union members of 1.5-3% interest on the loan amount.15 - ILA official Nunzio LaGrasso, Newark police officer Alan Marfia, and Rocco Ferrandino, a timekeeper on the Waterfront, were also chared.' 5 8 The investigation into these three individuals is still ongoing. On January 20, 2011, 127 members and associates of various crime families of La Cosa Nostra were charged with racketeering and related crimes and at least 110 were arrested.160 Both United States v. Cicalese and 150. Hester, supra note 71. 151. Id. 152. Press Release, Waterfront Comm'n of N.Y. Harbor, Genovese Soldier and Checker Pled Guilty in Port Loansharking Case (Oct. 28, 2011), http://www.waterfrontcommission.org/newspage67.html. 153. Id. 154. Tom Hester, Sr., Joseph Quali of Wall Gets Five Years in Prisonfor Waterfront Loansharking, NEWJERSEYNEWSROOM.COM (Feb. 10, 2011), http://www.newjerseynews room.com/state/joseph-quali-of-wall-gets-5-years-in-prison-for-waterfront-loansharking. 155. Press Release, N.J. Att'y General's Office, Top Union Official and Two Other Men Indicted in Investigation into Alleged Scheme to Extort Money from Dock Workers (Feb. 8, 2011), http://www.nj.gov/oag/newsreleases11/pr20110208a.html. 156. Hester, supra note 71. 157. Id. 158. Id. 159. Tom Hester, Sr., ILA Union Official, Newark Cop and Third Man Indicted in Alleged Scheme to Extort Longshoremen, NEWJERSEYNEWSROOM.COM (Feb. 8, 2011), http://www.newjerseynewsroom.com/state/ila-union-official-newark-cop-and-third-manindicted-in-alleged-scheme-to-extort-longshormen. 160. Press Release, Dep't of Justice-Office of Pub. Affairs-AG, 91 Leaders, Members and Associates of La Cosa Nostra Families in Four Districts Charged with Racketeering and Related Crimes, Including Murder and Extortion (Jan. 20, 2011), http://www.wcnyh.org/ news/JusticeGov 01-20-2011 PressRelease.pdf. THE "WATCHDOG" AGENCY 2012] 275 United States v. DePiro had large impacts on the Waterfront. 161 The Cicalese indictment charged three members of the ILA with committing perjury during testimony before a federal grand jury investigation of organized crime's infiltration of the waterfront and the ILA.162 The DePiro indictment charged fifteen individuals, including the current and two former ILA Local 1235 presidents with various racketeering related crimes, such as extortion of members of the ILA each year at Christmas time when the longshoremen received a portion of royalty payments paid by shipping companies. 163 Aulisi, who was previously removed from the Waterfront and expelled from the union, was also charged in this indictment. 164 On the date of the arrests, U.S. Attorney Paul J. Fishman stated: [O]rganized crime still has a grip on the New Jersey waterfront. Workers should be free to pursue an honest living without being worried that their own union representatives will shake them down. Our ports and those who work there play vital roles in our region's economy and security. Paying tribute to the mob is not an acceptable cost of doing business in New Jersey.1 65 These investigations are ongoing. 166 On September 15, 2011, Greg "Ronnie" Taylor, a former ILA official, was arrested and charged with embezzlement for allegedly stealing more than $100,000 in union funds for personal use from 2005 to 2010.167 This investigation is also ongoing. 6 8 IV. THE WCNYH's TOOLS TO FIGHT ORGANIZED CRIME In addition to conducting investigations in cooperation with federal and local police agencies, the Waterfront Commission also has various internal mechanisms to fight organized crime. 161. See id. 162. Id. 163. Id. 164. Indictment at 1, United States v. Depiro, et al, 10 Cr. 851 (D. N.J. filed Jan. 01, 2011), availableat, http://www.justice.gov/opa/documents/1-20-2011 -depiro.pdf. 165. Press Release, The U.S. Attorney's Office: Dist. of N.J., Genovese Organized Crime Family Soldier and Associates Indicted on Racketeering Charges, Including Extortion of Int'l Longshoremen's Ass'n Members (Jan. 20, 2011), http://www.justice.gov/ usao/nj/Press/files/Depiro%20et.%20al.%2ONews%20Release.html. 166. See id. The charges contained in the indictment are merely accusations, and the defendants are presumed innocent until proven guilty. See id. 167. Press Release, Waterfront Comm'n of N.Y. Harbor, Former Int'l Longshoremen's Union Officer Arrested, Charged with Embezzlement (Sept. 15, 2011), http://www.wcnyh.org/newspage63.html. 168. See id. 276 CRIMINAL AND CIVIL CONFINEMENT A. [Vol. 38:257 The Controlled Register Statute The Mafia exploited the labor imbalance on the Waterfront. 169 Only union members who supported the corrupt union leaders and agreed to kick-back a portion of their wages were guaranteed a spot on one of the gangs.170 In order to facilitate the Commission's power to ensure fair hiring and employment practices, in 1966, New York and New Jersey enacted the controlled register statute or section 5-p of the Waterfront Commission Act. 171 This provision empowered the Waterfront Commission to open and close the "Deep-Sea" Longshoreman Register as dictated by labor needs. 172 The Waterfront Commission successfully serves as a buffer between the employers and the organized workforce, seeking to ensure that the workers are protected against unfair hiring and employment practices, specifically preventing a surplus of labor. 173 For more than forty years, the Waterfront Commission has exercised its power responsibly." The Waterfront Commission closed the register in 1966, shortly after the enactment of section 5-p due to containerization, which drastically reduced the need for labor. 175 For the next thirty years, with the aid of section 5-p, the Waterfront Commission carefully stabilized the labor-to-job ratio to avoid imbalance. 176 By 1998, there was an increased demand for labor as a result of increased business in the port, work-rule changes in the Collective Bargaining Agreement, and attrition of the workforce. 7 7 The Waterfront Commission responded by holding public hearings to determine the best way to meet the needs of the industry, workers, and the port without revisiting the problems that previously plagued the Waterfront. 78 As a result, in 1999, section 5-p was amended to allow the industry to petition the Waterfront Commission for additional "Deep-Sea" longshoremen and established specific criteria that the Waterfront Commission is mandated to examine before allowing or denying additional labor. 17 9 Letter from Walter Arsenault, Exec. Dir., Waterfront Comm'n of N.Y. Harbor, to 169. Michael H. Ranzenhofer, Senator, 61st Senate Dist. (May 13, 2012) (on file with author). 170. Id. 171. 172. 173. 174. 175. 176. 177. 178. 179. Id. Id Id. Id Id. Id. Id. Id Id. THE "WATCHDOG" AGENCY 2012] 277 B. Prohibition Against Union Officials with Felony Convictions In 2009, the Waterfront Commission removed John Shade from his position as General Vice President of the Atlantic Coast District (ACD) and prevented him from holding any ACD office in the future under section 8 of Part III of the Act.SU Shade sustained at least five disqualifying convictions, several of which were for conducting illegal gambling businesses and illegal lotteries.' 8 1 One of his federal felony convictions was for conspiracy, in a case where the underlying charges involved Shade challenged his removal by the Waterfront racketeering. Commission in an Article 78 proceeding. 8 3 However, the court agreed with the Commission's contention that officials in the ILA and the ACD hold positions that have substantial power to affect labor relations on the New York-New Jersey waterfront and rejected Shade's claim that an ACD vice president for an area such as Baltimore is beyond the Commission's jurisdiction. 184 Despite these victories, Shade was reinstated by the ILA after he obtained a Certificate of Good Conduct from the New York State Division of Parole.18 5 No one at the WCNYH was consulted by the Division of Parole prior to issuing the Certificate.186 C. Public Hearings Between October 14, 2010 and December 2, 2010, the Waterfront Commission held public hearings concerning conditions within the Port of New York and the dual question of work and pay.18 7 These hearings examined and evaluated allegations of widespread no show and no work jobs, favoritism, abuse of the collective bargaining agreement, unfair hiring practices, racketeering attacks on the industry, and the impact it has on the competitiveness of the Port.18 8 180. Press Release, Waterfront Comm'n of N.Y. Harbor, Court Rules Removal of ILA Atlantic Coast District VP John Shade Was Proper (Oct. 29, 2009), http://www.waterfrontcommission.org/newspage25.html. 181. Id. 182. 183. Id. Id. 184. Id. 185. John Shade, Oct. 19, 2011, from Eric Fields, Senior Counsel of the WCNYH to Francis Herman, Director at New York State Division of Parole, at 1. 186. Id. 187. Steve Strunsky, New Jersey Waterfront Commission Holds FirstHearing on Mob Influence at Docks, N.J. STAR-LEDGER (Oct. 15, 2010), http://www.nj.com/news/index.ssf/ 2010/10/ nj holds first hearingon_fate.html. 188. Id. 278 CRIMINAL AND CIVIL CONFINEMENT [Vol. 38:257 Edward Aulisi's case was highlighted at the hearing.189 Surveillance photos showed Aulisi barbequing and mowing his lawn at home while he was signed-in and being paid as a checker on the Waterfront.190 Between 2007 and 2010, he supposedly earned about $100,000 annually.191 His intercepted conversation in 2007 with Michael "Mikey Cigars" Coppola was played for an audience; it explained how Aulisi's organized crime connections helped him get a better job on the docks.192 Aulisi refused to answer questions, systematically asserting his privilege against selfincrimination.1 93 A representative from the stevedore company who employed Aulisi testified that as a relief checker, Aulisi "is paid whether or not he is providing relief1 94 and is not required to be on-site even during the [shift] he is assigned." 95 These hearings demonstrated that organized crime continues to negatively influence the Waterfront.196 V. CONCLUSION The infiltration of the mob into the unions that unite the dock workers on the Waterfront is not a myth at all, but rather the reality of the state of affairs on the Waterfront. The WCNYH is a watchdog agency that has been fighting organized crime on the Waterfront since the 1950s. Recent public hearings held by the WCNYH exposed the current status of the corruption and the Public Hearing Report from March 21, 2012 suggests various ways to improve the conditions on the Waterfront, some of which would expand the Commission's powers.1 97 After a massive takedown of organized crime members and associates on January 20, 2011, FBI Director Robert S. Mueller, III stated, "Some people believe organized crime is a thing of the past; unfortunately, there are still people who extort, intimidate, and 189. Id. 190. Id. Richard Perez-Pena, In Waterfront Hearings, Accounts of a Union's Kickbacks 191. anda Mafia Tie, N.Y. TIMES (Oct. 14, 2010), http://www.nytimes.com/2010/10/15/nyregion /15waterfront.html. Strunsky, supra note 187. 192. 193. Id. Strunsky, supra note 187. A relief checker provides relief or a break to checkers 194. that have been working for a long time. See Collective BargainingAgreement between New York Shipping Association, Inc. and International Longshoremen's Association, AFL-CIO, N.Y. SHIPPING Ass'N INC. at 37 (Oct. 1, 2004), http://www.nysanet.org/pdf/CBA.pdf (last visited Apr. 15, 2012). 195. Strunsky, supra note 187. Waterfront Commission's Special Report on Public Hearings, WATERFRONT 196. COMM'N, Mar. 21, 2012, availableat http://www.waterfrontcommission.org/news/Water front%20Commission%2Oof/o20New%2OYork%20Harbor/20Special%20Report.pdf 197. Id. 2012] THE "WATCHDOG"AGENCY 279 victimize innocent Americans." 9 8 The Commission's continued existence and success, especially in recent years after various reforms,1 99 is a beacon of hope in an industry that has been battling corruption for decades. As it continues to fulfill its mission, let there be no doubt that the Waterfront Commission has a purpose. 198. Press Release, Dep't of Justice-Office of Pub. Affairs-AG, 91 Leaders, Members and Associates of La Cosa Nostra Families in Four Districts Charged with Racketeering and Related Crimes, Including Murder and Extortion (Jan. 20, 2011), http://www.wcnyh.org/news/JusticeGov_01-20-2011_Press Release.pdf. 199. In July 2008, the Commission underwent various reforms, reorganization, and rededicated itself to its mission. See Press Release, N.Y. State Inspector Gen., Waterfront Comm'n Plagued By Abuse and Corruption (Aug. 11, 2009), http://www.ig.ny.gov/pdfs/Waterfront%20Commission%20Plagued%2OBy%20Abuse%20a nd%20Corruption.pdf; see also Press Release, Waterfront Comm'n of N.Y. Harbor, WCNYH Response to NYS IG [Draft] Report (July 13, 2009), http://www.wcnyh.org/news/WCNYH_1GResponse_7-31-2009.pdf.