Arab Times

US nominates NY lawyer to monitor UAW union

-

The U.S. attorney’s office in Detroit is recommendi­ng that a federal judge name New York lawyer Neil Barofsky to monitor the United Auto Workers union’s behavior after a corruption scandal.

Appointing an independen­t monitor is part of a settlement the union agreed to with federal prosecutor­s in December. He’ll stay in place for six years unless both sides agree to a shorter term.

Barofsky leads the law firm Jenner & Block’s monitorshi­p practice. He monitored two units of Credit Suisse following multibilli­on-dollar settlement­s. He also was an assistant U.S. Attorney in Manhattan and served as Special Inspector

General for the Troubled Asset Relief Program, which bailed out banks and two auto companies after the 2009 financial crisis.

After a monitor is appointed, the union has six months to hold a secret-ballot election to decide whether members will vote directly to pick the union’s future leaders. Barofsky would monitor the election, as well as compliance with the settlement. Currently union leaders are picked by delegates to a national convention.

The monitor will administer the election, will have the power to approve hiring or discharges of union employees, and can end or approve contracts, the settlement agreement says.

Acting U.S. Attorney Saima S. Mohsin made the motion to hire Barofsky on Monday, according to court records. The union submitted the names of three candidates, and the appointmen­t still must be approved by Judge David Lawson.

The agreement came in the wake of a wide-ranging federal probe into corruption that reached into the upper ranks of the 400,000-member UAW. It held off a possible federal takeover of the union due to the bribery and embezzleme­nt investigat­ion that has lasted more than five years. (AP)

 ??  ?? In this file photo, Neil Barofsky, then-Special Inspector General for the Troubled Asset Relief Program, testifies before the House Appropriat­ions Subcommitt­ee on Financial Services and General Government on the Financial Crisis and TARP program on Capitol Hill in Washington. The US attorney’s office in Detroit is recommendi­ng that a federal judge name Barofsky to monitor the United Auto Workers union’s behavior after a corruption scandal. (AP)
In this file photo, Neil Barofsky, then-Special Inspector General for the Troubled Asset Relief Program, testifies before the House Appropriat­ions Subcommitt­ee on Financial Services and General Government on the Financial Crisis and TARP program on Capitol Hill in Washington. The US attorney’s office in Detroit is recommendi­ng that a federal judge name Barofsky to monitor the United Auto Workers union’s behavior after a corruption scandal. (AP)

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait