Ex-Teamster leader pleads guilty in Chicago extortion case
CHICAGO – A 59-year-old who was one of Chicago’s most powerful labour leaders has pleaded guilty to receiving over $500,000 in illegal payments and benefits, including the use of a yacht.
Former Teamsters Union official, John Coli Sr., changed his plea to guilty Tuesday in a federal case focused on how he squeezed one Chicago company for cash. He agreed to co-operate for a lower prison term of around 20 months.
The plea deal describes Coli threatening in 2016 to bring a picket line to the company and “shut it down within an hour” if it stopped $25,000 quarterly payments to him. Court filings don’t identify the company.
Coli pleaded guilty to receiving prohibited payments as a union officer and making a false income tax return. Eleven other counts will be dismissed.
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