Royal Oak Tribune

Former UAW exec gets 2 1/2 years in prison for kickback

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A former United Auto Workers vice president who took a $250,000 kickback on a watch contract was sentenced Tuesday to 2 1/2 years in prison, the latest punishment in what the government calls “systemic” corruption at the highest ranks of the union.

Joe Ashton, 72, of Ocean View, New Jersey, had hoped for house arrest, noting his wife has multiple sclerosis and needs constant care. But the judge said a prison term was appropriat­e for a crime that shook the faith of thousands of union members.

“We have to send a message,” U. S. District Judge Bernard Friedman said over Zoom. “We have to let people know that the criminal justice system is not a system that’s only for people on the streets selling drugs and things of that nature. ... Sometimes good people do bad things.”

Ashton doesn’t have to report to prison until June because of the risk of the coronaviru­s, the judge said.

Ashton led the union’s General Motors department until July 2014 and also had a seat on the automaker’s board. He awarded a $3.9 million contract from the UAW-GM training center for thousands of watches that were produced but never given to union members.

In exchange, he got a $250,000 kickback from the vendor, a chiropract­or.

“I cannot tell you how ashamed and remorseful I am for what I’ve done,” Ashton said.

The government had asked for a two - yea r, 10 - month prison term. The judge took an unusual step by allowing Ashton’s family members and a friend to plead for mercy.

“I depend on Joe for so much on a daily basis,” his wife, Denise, said over video conference.

Eleven union officials and a late official’s spouse have pleaded guilty since 2017, including former presidents Dennis Williams and Gary Jones. Not all the crimes were connected, revealing the breadth and diversity of the corruption. The first wave of conviction­s, which included some Fiat Chrysler employees, involved taking money from a Fiat ChryslerUA­W training center in Detroit. Other crimes involved union dues spent for highend lodging, boozy meals and golf in California.

“As the government’s prosecutio­n of the UAW has revealed, the culture of corruption within the senior leadership of the UAW is systemic,” Assistant U.S. Attorney Frances Carlson said in a court filing. “The need to transform the unethical, greedy, and self-indulgent behavior characteri­stic of the UAW leadership is long overdue.”

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