Arab Times

Culture of corruption: ex-UAW leader gets 28-month sentence

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He plotted to steal up to $1.5 million in union dues, and the money he diverted was spent on golf clubs, vacation homes, booze and lavish meals, fostering a culture of corruption within the United Auto Workers union.

Now former UAW president Gary Jones will have to spend 28 months in a federal prison and repay thousands of dollars for his crimes.

Jones, 64, was sentenced Thursday by U.S. District Judge Paul Borman in Detroit after pleading guilty to two counts of conspiracy last year. Borman ordered that Jones surrender for his term in 90 days and recommende­d a low-security federal prison in Seagoville, Texas, so he would be close to his wife who now lives near Dallas.

Before sentencing, Jones choked up in the courtroom as he apologized to his family and union members for his actions.

“I failed them. I failed the UAW that elected me as president,” he told Borman. “All I can say is I’m sorry I let them down, I let my family down.”

Federal sentencing guidelines called for Jones to get 46 to 57 months in prison due to his high position in the union.

But prosecutor­s asked for 28 months because Jones accepted responsibi­lity and cooperated as the government went after his cohorts in a wide-ranging probe of union corruption.

“He was willing to assist in any way,” Assistant U.S. Attorney David Gardey told the court. “And he was truthful.” (AP)

 ??  ?? In this file photo, Gary Jones, United Auto Workers President, speaks during the opening of their contract talks with Fiat Chrysler Automobile­s in Auburn Hills, Michigan. (AP)
In this file photo, Gary Jones, United Auto Workers President, speaks during the opening of their contract talks with Fiat Chrysler Automobile­s in Auburn Hills, Michigan. (AP)
 ?? (AP) ?? Oriana Hernandez, (left), and Mercedes Ramos become emotional at their home while talking about Jerry Ramos, 32, in Watsonvill­e, Calif., Sunday, June 6. Hernandez’s boyfriend and Mercedes Ramos’ son Jerry Ramos died Feb. 15 at age 32, becoming not just one of the roughly 600,000 Americans who have now perished in the outbreak but another example of the virus’s strikingly uneven and ever-shifting toll on the nation’s racial and ethnic groups.
(AP) Oriana Hernandez, (left), and Mercedes Ramos become emotional at their home while talking about Jerry Ramos, 32, in Watsonvill­e, Calif., Sunday, June 6. Hernandez’s boyfriend and Mercedes Ramos’ son Jerry Ramos died Feb. 15 at age 32, becoming not just one of the roughly 600,000 Americans who have now perished in the outbreak but another example of the virus’s strikingly uneven and ever-shifting toll on the nation’s racial and ethnic groups.

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