Union-Boss ‘Hero’ Turns Out to Be a Fraud
In December 2020, the hierarchy of the notoriously corrupt United Auto Workers (UAW) entered into a federal consent decree after a dozen high-ranking union officers and staff members
Forbes Magazine had an interesting article last month about a lawsuit, “which is seeking class action status . . . ,” that “accuses ING . . . Life Insurance and the New York State United Teachers of ripping off union members in a retirement savings plan through over-charges, undisclosed payments and kickbacks.”
According to the article, Lynn Sarko, an attorney representing the plaintiffs in the ING case, is “preparing to file three similar suits” this month.
“Our investigation shows this was not an aberrant practice but widespread . . . . What’s so insidious in the New York case is that union officials held themselves out as having investigated and approved retirement products when they were in fact conspiring with ING to hide the facts and personally benefit.”
What’s even more insidious is that many of the workers who are being scammed are forced to fork over their hard earned funds to these same Big Labor Bosses as a prerequisite for getting or keeping their jobs.
In December 2020, the hierarchy of the notoriously corrupt United Auto Workers (UAW) entered into a federal consent decree after a dozen high-ranking union officers and staff members
In 2018, federal records show that government union boss Witold Skwierczynski was banned from federal offices for alleged gross misconduct. Nevertheless, he continued to get paid by taxpayers to conduct union business!
Top UAW officials decided just a few months ago to spend autoworkers’ forced-dues money to convene a “bargaining strategies” meeting at a hotel/casino located right next to the beach in sunny Puerto Rico.