Occupy Milwaukee, June 5, 2012 |
The wife of the former head of one of the nation's largest union locals has pleaded guilty to an income tax charge in connection with more than $540,000 she received in consulting payments from the Los Angeles-based labor organization.More...
As part of a deal with the U.S. attorney's office here, Pilar Planells pleaded guilty earlier this month to a misdemeanor count of failure to file a 2008 tax return for the money that Local 6434 of the Service Employees International Union paid to a firm she founded. Planells is expected to be sentenced to three years' probation next month, according to court records.
She must also pay about $130,000 in back taxes, interest and penalties, records show. The case against Planells grew out of Times reports in 2008 that focused on the financial dealings of her husband, Tyrone Freeman, who was later ousted as Local 6434 president. The federal investigation of Freeman is continuing, officials said Friday.
The Times reported that Local 6434 and a related charity paid hundreds of thousands of dollars to Planells' firm, Lotus Seven Productions, and her mother's day-care service. Under Freeman's direction, the local spent similar sums at a golfing resort, expensive restaurants and a Beverly Hills cigar lounge, according to records and interviews.The workers represented by Local 6434 are described as "low wage" by the paper.
Fallout from The Times' reports spread through the SEIU and cost other union officials their jobs. Still pending is a lawsuit the union filed against Freeman and Planells that seeks to recover more than $1.1 million allegedly pilfered. The money allegedly financed Freeman's lifestyle of $175 glasses of cognac, $250 bottles of wine and a $3,400 trip to the NFL Pro Bowl in Hawaii. At the time, Local 6434's members were paid about $9 an hour.
Technorati tags: Politicsleft wing extremists current events occupywallstreet SEIU labor unions organized labor corruption legal
Well, . . . that just an Orwellian kick in the head?
ReplyDelete"No question now, what had happened to the faces of the pigs. The creatures outside looked from pig to man, and from man to pig, and from pig to man again; but already it was impossible to say which was which."
- George Orwell, Animal Farm, Ch. 10