National Legal and Policy Center -- Organized Labor Accountability Project
 
UNION CORRUPTION UPDATE
 
April 12, 1999 -- Vol. 2, Issue 8


 
For Influential Leaders & Important Decision Makers:
Information on America's most corrupt & aggressive unions


GOVERNMENT EMPLOYEES (AFSCME)
New York Local 384 Bosses Indicted for Stealing $240,000
Manhattan Dist. Atty. Robert Morgenthau’s probe of the scandal-ridden Am. Fed. of State, County & Municipal Employees’ Dist. Council 37 won his first two indictments on Mar. 31. DC37 Local 384 president Francine Autovino and treasurer Connie Lango were indicted for stealing over $240,000 from union coffers. Both pled not guilty at their arraignments on charges of grand larceny and falsifying business records. Reportedly, both blamed the other for the missing thousands of dollars.

According to Morgenthau, Lango stole over $190,000 from May 1994 to Sep. 1995. She allegedly asked Local 384’s bank to write checks payable to herself, credit-card companies and car leasing firms. Reportedly, Autovino took over $50,000 by double-dipping on car expenses, filing false receipts and giving her friends and relatives freebie trips. Her alleged schemes included submitting invoices for printing union brochures and then named herself as the payee. Investigators are still looking into jewelry purchases Autovino made on her union credit card.

Both also allegedly spent more than $31,000 on an unauthorized Jun. 1994 junket to Hawaii via a union convention in San Diego. And Lango also reportedly stopped in Las Vegas.

Autovino was expelled from DC37 on Mar. 11. Lango was fired in 1996. Autovino faces 15 years in prison. Lango faces seven. To date, five DC37 bosses have been charged with crimes. [N.Y. Post, Newsday, N.Y. Times 4/1/99]


In addition to the unions and organizations covered in this Union Corruption Update, readers can look forward to news and information on other corrupt and abusive unions in future editions.

All back issues of the Union Corruption Update can be viewed at NLPC's website (www.nlpc.org).  Also available is a union by union index of all Union Corruption Update articles.

If you have story ideas or suggestions for future editions of Union Corruption Update, please email NLPC at nlpc@nlpc.org.  Thank you.

Union Corruption Update is part of NLPC's Organized Labor Accountability Project which is investigating and exposing corruption and extremism in the Teamsters, LIUNA, AFL-CIO and many other union organizations. NLPC is a nonpartisan, nonprofit foundation promoting ethics and accountability in government through research, education and legal action.


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