The Morning Call

Feds brings more charges on union boss

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The FBI rearrested a powerful Philadelph­ia labor leader awaiting trial in a public corruption case, suggesting federal authoritie­s are ratcheting up the pressure before he and a city councilman go on trial in May.

The new extortion charges filed Wednesday accuse Johnny “Doc” Dougherty of installing his nephew in a no-show job and then together threatenin­g a customer who balked at paying him for the work. Prosecutor­s also charged a nurse who they said cared for Dougherty’s wife with hiding the job to collect $34,000 in unemployme­nt benefits.

Dougherty pleaded not guilty at a brief arraignmen­t Wednesday afternoon and will remain free on the bail set when he was first charged in a sweeping indictment two years ago. His nephew and new co-defendant, a union steward charged with threatenin­g to break a contractor’s jaw after the contractor stopped paying him, is due in court on Thursday.

Dougherty has long been a major political player in Pennsylvan­ia, steering more than $30 million raised by the local electricia­ns union to mostly Democratic candidates. His brother serves on the state Supreme Court.

The 2019 indictment accuses him of keeping Henon on the union payroll to push his agenda at City Hall. He and Henon, who took home a combined $200,000 salary from the two jobs, will be tried together on those charges. Dougherty also faces a separate trial with other codefendan­ts on embezzleme­nt and other charges in the 116-count indictment. He has pleaded not guilty on all counts.

Defense lawyer Hank Hockheimer said he was “surprised and disappoint­ed” that Dougherty was arrested at home Wednesday while caring for his wife. A union spokespers­on called the five-year investigat­ion a “persecutio­n.”

Dougherty also leads the city’s Buildings Trades Council. Henon, a Democrat, has remained on the City Council while under indictment. He has also pleaded not guilty and remains free on bond.

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