Ex-UAW leader Gary Jones deserves more than two years in prison, feds say

Detroit — Prosecutors want former United Auto Workers President Gary Jones to spend more than two years in federal prison for helping steal as much as $1.5 million from union members. 

In revealing the desired 28-month prison term Thursday, prosecutors also requested that Jones pay $550,000 in restitution to the UAW, $42,000 to the IRS and a forfeiture of $151,377 for his role in a conspiracy that undermined members’ faith in union leadership and led to prolonged government oversight.

In a separate filing, Jones’s lawyer asked U.S. District Judge Paul Borman for “a significant downward departure” from the sentencing guidelines and asked that he serve any prison sentence in a Texas prison near his wife, though he did not specify how many months imprisonment he feels is appropriate.

Gary Jones.

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Also Thursday, prosecutors moved to dismiss charges against another UAW official, Jeff Pietrzyk, who pleaded guilty two years ago to receiving bribes and kickbacks from union contractors. Pietrzyk was awaiting a likely prison sentence but died of undisclosed causes in April. U.S. District Judge Bernard Friedman dismissed the criminal case against him.

Jones will be sentenced June 10 and faces a maximum of nearly five years under a plea agreement for conspiring with other labor leaders to embezzle money from 2010-19 and to commit a tax crime. The 28-month requested sentence is less than Jones’ sentencing guideline range of 46 to 57 months, but is appropriate because he cooperated with federal investigators and “has not sought to minimize his crimes or to point fingers at others for his own misconduct,” prosecutors wrote.

A 28-month sentence would be tied for the second longest for a UAW official convicted in the corruption scandal. Former Vice President Joe Ashton was sentenced to 30 months for taking $250,000 in kickbacks from a union vendor, and former UAW official Mike Grimes was sentenced to 28 months after admitting he received $1.5 million in bribes and kickbacks from a union contractor.

“There is no question that Jones’ crimes were substantial and serious,” prosecutors wrote in the request.