UAW’s legal team overhaul continues as Fain copes with federal investigations

Detroit — United Auto Workers President Shawn Fain dumped attorneys from a Chicago law firm that was paid more than $3.2 million to handle the union’s response to a landmark federal corruption investigation after firing UAW General Counsel Abigail Carter and two members of the union’s legal team.

Attorneys from Cotsirilos, Tighe, Streicker, Poulos & Campbell revealed the rift in a federal court filing Wednesday that marks the latest development as Fain remakes the union’s legal team amid ongoing oversight by a court-appointed government watchdog. That watchdog, UAW monitor Neil Barofsky, appointed to root out corruption and oversee reforms in one of the nation’s most influential and troubled unions, has described in court filings a rocky start to the UAW’s rehabilitation and revealed new ongoing federal investigations.

UAW President Shawn Fain is continuing his effort to remake the union's legal team.

The move by Fain leaves the UAW without veteran criminal defense lawyers who have experience with the union’s entrenched corruption as well as dealing with a government team of prosecutors and investigators in Detroit and U.S. District Judge David Lawson, who is overseeing reforms. The investigation led to 18 convictions and prolonged government oversight of the UAW and Stellantis NV due to a series of crimes by high-ranking officials who paid and pocketed bribes, broke labor laws and stole money from union members.

Law firm attorneys Terence Campbell and Eric Pruitt wrote in a filing Wednesday that Fain had prompted the split.

“The UAW’s newly-elected president recently informed attorneys that the UAW no longer wishes to have attorneys represent the UAW in ongoing matters and directed attorneys to cease their representation of the UAW, including in this case,” they wrote.

“Per the communication from the newly-elected UAW president, it is attorneys’ understanding that the UAW has retained, or is retaining, new outside counsel to represent it in open matters,” they added.

Lawson on Friday granted a request by the Chicago lawyers to withdraw from the federal oversight case. There was no immediate comment from a UAW spokesman Friday.