When Nashua, New Hampshire postal worker Philip Wakeman paid dues to the National Post Mail Handlers Union (NPMHU), a division of the Laborers’ International Union, he had no idea that union bosses would illegally launder his money into their political coffers.
In July 2006, Mr. Wakeman gave a check to the NPMHU union for the full amount of his annual union dues. On the "Memo" line at the bottom of the check, he wrote "Union Dues." A union official later acknowledged receipt of the dues and everything seemed fine – that is – until he received a bizarre phone call.
In October 2008, over two years after submitting the check to the NPMHU union, a stranger informed Wakeman that she found his information on the internet and suggested he do a "Google" internet search of his name. The search results were astounding: Mr. Wakeman found his name disclosed as making a contribution in the exact amount of his annual NPMHU union membership dues to the NPMHU Political Action Committee (PAC) – all without his knowledge.
Apparently NPMHU union bosses had illegally diverted his dues payment to the union’s PAC. Wakeman contacted the National Right to Work Legal Defense Foundation and Foundation attorneys filed a complaint with the Federal Election Commission.
It is illegal for union officials to fund union PACs using "dues, fees, or other moneys required as a condition of membership in a labor organization." NPMHU union bosses are also accused of violating federal election law by making a political campaign contribution in another person’s name and failing to inform Mr. Wakeman that his membership dues would be used for political purposes.
To read the Foundation’s media release regarding the FEC complaint, click here.
To read the FEC complaint, click here.