National Legal and Policy Center -- Organized Labor Accountability Project
 
UNION CORRUPTION UPDATE
 
September 27, 1999 -- Vol. 2, Issue 20


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


TEAMSTERS (IBT) / UNION DEMOCRACY
Indicted Kentucky Bosses Fire Upstart Challengers
Teamsters Local 89 bosses fired four business agents and an office manager Sep. 14 in a shake-up that signals the biggest challenge to the local's established leadership since it was founded 62 years ago. A fifth business agent resigned in support of those who were fired. The ousted officers are candidates on or supporters of a slate that seeks to unseat the current local president and executive board in a December election. "We were fired for announcing our intention to run,'' said Fred Zuckerman, a business agent who announced his candidacy for the local's presidency Sep. 9. Zuckerman said the firings are illegal under the Teamsters constitution and that he planned to file appeals to higher union bodies.

Zuckerman is challenging current president Robert Winstead, who succeeded to the office in Dec. 98 from the secretary-treasurer's position. Ex-president Lon Fields retired a year early to give Winstead a year in the office before he had to run for reelection. Winstead and Fields are part of a dynasty in the local that stretches back to 1952 and includes a 14-year stint in the presidency by Winstead's father, Marion, who retired in 1990. No dissident faction has ever successfully challenged the local's leadership since the local was founded in 1937.

Fired with Zuckerman were Carolin Washburn who was office manager and bookkeeper for the local and who is a candidate for secretary-treasurer; Mike Fackler, a business agent and candidate for one of the local's three trustee jobs; David Swift, a business agent and trustee candidate; and Avral Thompson, business agent and a supporter of the slate. Tim Thompson, another business agent who supports the slate, resigned in protest over the firings.

Besides Winstead, current top local leadership includes Bob Myers, secretary-treasurer; Gerald Shaw, vice president, Tom Trenaman; recording secretary; and John Wientjes, John Bolton and Gary Hug, all trustees. Hug is a son of Norman Hug, who succeeded Marion Winstead in the local's presidency, just before Fields' term.

Fields and Robert Winstead were indicted in September 1998 and charged with violating election law in the 1995 election of Ky. Gov. Paul Patton (D). The charges were dismissed in June, but the dismissal was appealed by Ky. Atty. Gen. Ben Chandler (D), and the case is pending before the Ky. Court of Appeals. Winstead, Shaw and Myers all appeared in this year's "$100,000 Club" list, prepared by the far-left activist group, Teamsters for a Democratic Union. TDU uses the list to point out what it considers excessive compensation of Teamsters bosses. [Courier-J. 9/15/99]


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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 and state-by-state index of all Union Corruption Update articles.

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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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