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Ex-Fiat Chrysler exec pleads guilty in union payoff scheme

Al Iacobelli pleaded guilty Monday to showering more than $1.5 million in cash and gifts on high-ranking members of the United Auto Workers, admitting he turned the budget of a company-sponsored training centre into a slush fund to curry favour with union officials.

Al Iacobelli showered more than $1.5M in cash and gifts on high-ranking UAW members

In this July 25, 2011 file photo, Al Iacobelli, former Vice President Employee Relations, Chrysler Group LLC, speaks at Chrysler Group LLC headquarters in Auburn Hills, Mich. Iacobelli, who handled labor relations for the company has pleaded guilty to showering more than $1.5 million in cash and gifts on high-ranking members of the United Auto Workers. He pleaded guilty Monday Jan. 22, 2018 to conspiracy and a tax crime and faces eight years in federal prison. (AP Photo/Paul Sancya File)

A former Fiat Chrysler executive pleaded guilty Monday to showering more than $1.5 million in cash and gifts on high-ranking members of the United Auto Workers, admitting he turned the budget of a company-sponsored training centre into a slush fund to curry favour with union officials.

Al Iacobelli said a key beneficiary was General Holiefield, a UAW vice-president who was responsible for negotiating with Fiat Chrysler on behalf of the union. A $262,000 mortgage on his suburban Detroit home was paid off in 2014 with a check from the training centre.

Executive likely faces 8 years in prison

Iacobelli pleaded guilty to conspiracy and a tax crime and likely faces eight years in federal prison. He failed to report $861,000 in money taken from the training centre in 2014.

"Fiat Chrysler's most senior labour negotiator colluded with top UAW leaders for many years to illegally line UAW officials' pockets," U.S. Attorney Matthew Schneider said.

Holiefield died in 2015, but his wife, Monica Morgan, is charged in the case. In his plea agreement, Iacobelli admitted to providing first-class air travel, designer clothing, furniture, jewelry and fancy watches to the couple and others, from 2009 through mid-2015.

I encourage you not to be discouraged by the actions of a few people that betrayed our core principles and our standards of morality, integrity and quality,- Sergio Marchionne, Fiat Chrysler CEO

The goal was to "obtain benefits, concessions and advantages" for Fiat Chrysler in the negotiation and execution of contracts between the company and the UAW, the plea deal states.

The plea agreement includes at least one instance where Iacobelli apparently influenced Holiefield. He said Holiefield had been "scripted" ahead of a 2013 meeting with the union's international executive board. The topic was a multibillion-dollar deal involving a retiree health fund. No other details were disclosed.

Company says it was unaware of scheme

The government said the money spent by Iacobelli came from the UAW-Chrysler National Training Center in Detroit. Fiat Chrysler made annual payments of $13 million to $28 million to the centre from 2009 to 2014. Iacobelli and Holiefield were co-chairmen.

Fiat Chrysler and the UAW said they were unaware of the scheme while it was unfolding. Iacobelli was fired in 2015.

"I encourage you not to be discouraged by the actions of a few people that betrayed our core principles and our standards of morality, integrity and quality," Fiat Chrysler chief Sergio Marchionne wrote to workers last summer.