Mistrial declared in extortion trial for John Dougherty and his nephew
It's the third criminal trial for the former Local 98 leader known to many as Johnny Doc.

A mistrial has been declared in the third federal criminal trial former labor leader John Dougherty, widely known as “Johnny Doc."
This case centers on allegations that Dougherty threatened a contractor and his nephew Greg Fiocca assaulted a job site manager amid a dispute over Fiocca’s poor job performance and pay during the 2020 construction of the Live! Casino in South Philadelphia. Defense attorneys say the government has blown the altercation out of proportion.
The jury began deliberations Thursday morning and told the judge late in the evening that they were at an impasse, prompting him to declare a mistrial. Prosecutors did not immediately say if they would retry the case.
Separate juries convicted Dougherty in a bribery case involving City Councilmember Bobby Henon and on charges that he and six others stole more than $600,000 from their union.
Recap: Mistrial for ex-Local 98 leader John Dougherty, nephew as jury deadlocks on extortion charges
READING – John Dougherty’s federal extortion case ended in a mistrial Thursday, offering an ambiguous conclusion to the embattled labor leader’s third felony trial in as many years.
After roughly 11 hours of deliberations, jurors told U.S. District Judge Jeffrey Schmehl they were hopelessly deadlocked on all of the 19 counts of conspiracy and extortion that Dougherty and his nephew, Greg Fiocca, faced.
“We are at a standstill,” the panel reported in a note to the judge just hours into their first day of discussion — signaling an impasse that would continue as their fruitless debate wound late into the night.
Prosecutors decline comment after mistrial
Filing out of the Reading courthouse late Thursday evening, prosecutors declined to comment on the inconclusive end to Dougherty’s third federal trial.
It remains unclear whether they will seek to retry the case.
- Oona Goodin-Smith
Lawyer for Fiocca welcomes mistrial
The inconclusive jury, said Greg Fiocca’s attorney, Rocco Cipparone, was the “right result.”
“We are hopeful for a not guilty, but we will take the hung jury at this stage,” Cipparone said outside the courthouse late Thursday night.
“It was a complex case. A lot of personalities, a lot of shortcomings in the government’s case,” Cipparone said, adding that he’s hopeful the government will not retry the matter.
Lawyer for Dougherty calls mistrial vindication for his client
Leaving court Thursday, John Dougherty offered little comment about the jury’s decision, but said he was in a hurry to return to Philadelphia.
“I’m going home to spend the last two hours of my birthday with my wife,” he said as he left the courthouse flanked by family and attorneys. (The former union chief turned 64 on Thursday.)
His lawyer, Greg Pagano, said the jury’s decision, though inconclusive, was vindicating for the embattled labor leader.
Dougherty reaction muted, but he briefly smiles
Dougherty showed little reaction in court as the judge declared the mistrial in his case, letting only a small smile flash across his face.
As the parties filed out of the room, Fiocca appeared in good spirits, thanking his attorney Rocco Cipparone and making small jokes as they left the courtroom.
- Jeremy Roebuck
With jury deadlocked, judge declares mistrial
The judge has declared a mistrial in Dougherty’s extortion case after jurors reported they were hopelessly deadlocked for a third time after roughly 11 hours of deliberations.
The decision ends the former labor leader’s third federal trial on a decidedly inconclusive note.
U.S. District Judge Jeffrey Schmehl polled each juror individually – hearing from each that they were doubtful any more progress could be made – before releasing them and ending the trial.
Jurors report they are deadlocked
The jury has reported it’s deadlocked.
Just after 8:00 p.m, U.S. District Judge Jeffrey Schmehl announced he’d received a note from the panel earlier in the evening reporting that their deliberations were at a standstill.
A second, more recent note, said, according to the judge: “We the jury are still at a stalemate.”
Deliberations continue following third question from jury
The jury emerged for yet another question just after 7:30 p.m., asking the judge to “define the concept and definition of extortion and how the party committing the extortion doesn’t need to be aware that it is a crime for it to be considered a crime.”
U.S. District Judge Jeffrey Schmehl repeated portions of the jury instructions he gave them this morning, outlining to the panel for a third time today elements required to deliver an extortion conviction.
He further defined what it meant to “willfully” commit an illegal act before sending the group back to the jury room to continue their discussions.
— Jeremy Roebuck
With deliberations still underway, Dougherty passes the time with soft pretzels, doughnuts
As the jury’s deliberations continue, Dougherty has passed the time milling about, making small talk and noshing on doughnuts and soft pretzels with family members waiting in a nearby conference room. He informed a group of reporters waiting in the courtroom that Thursday was his 64th birthday.
“Just so you know,” he quipped, as the day dragged on into night, “I’m definitely celebrating with you.”
— Jeremy Roebuck
Dougherty’s upcoming sentencing date moved to July
While Dougherty mills about the Reading courthouse awaiting a verdict in his third federal trial in as many years, the judge has officially pushed the sentencing date for his prior bribery and embezzlement convictions back by two months.
The former labor leader — who has remained free on bail since 2019 — was originally slated to be sentenced next week, but in court filings Thursday, U.S. District Judge Jeffrey L. Schmehl rescheduled that date to July 11.
— Oona Goodin-Smith
Jury asks whether Dougherty and his nephew 'have a right to use tactics such as pulling a man off the job'
After hours of closed-door deliberations, the jury has emerged with another set of questions.
In the first, the panel requested more information on whether Dougherty and his nephew “have a right to use tactics such as pulling a man off the job.”
In response, U.S. District Judge Jeffrey L. Schmehl explained to the group the definition of the Supreme Court-recognized claim-of-right defense, which allows the use of economic threats or force to achieve legitimate union objectives if one is acting in their capacity as a union representative.
After six hours, jury deliberations continue
They’re still at it. Nearly six hours after they began their deliberations this morning, jurors remain cloistered away working on a possible verdict in the case.
Typically, court has ended around 4:30 or 5 p.m. each day. But as the clock reached that hour Thursday, signs emerged that we could be in for a long night.
Around that time, the lawyers returned from an in-chambers conference with the judge.
Jury asks for clarification on requirements for conspiracy and extortion convictions
Jurors have emerged with their first questions after roughly two and a half hours of deliberations.
The panel requested the chance to review a transcript entered into evidence during the trial and asked U.S. District Judge Jeffrey L. Schmehl to once again repeat the elements required to convict Dougherty and Fiocca on the conspiracy and extortion charges they’re facing.
Schmehl repeated instructions he gave them during the jury charge this morning.
Deliberations begin: 'I ask you to take this case and render justice'
The federal extortion case of former labor leader John Dougherty and his nephew, Greg Fiocca, now rests in the jury’s hands.
Before releasing the panel to begin discussing the case, U.S. District Judge Jeffrey L. Schmehl stressed to jurors that Dougherty and Fiocca have pleaded not guilty to the charges against them, and that the men should be considered innocent unless the government has proven otherwise, beyond a reasonable doubt.
“They started the trial with a clean slate with no evidence against them,” Schmehl said.
Jury gets instructions on the law before deliberations begin
Good morning from the federal courthouse in Reading, where jurors in the extortion trial of John Dougherty and his nephew, Greg Fiocca, are expected to begin deliberations today.
But before the 12-member panel begins their closed-door deliberations in attempt to render a unanimous verdict, U.S. District Judge Jeffrey L. Schmehl is delivering instructions to jurors on the law.
Schmehl told the jury it has two duties: to decide what happened, and to apply the law.
John Dougherty extortion trial set to go to the jury today
After six days of testimony, two dozen witnesses, countless text message transcripts, and one key secret recording, the extortion case against John Dougherty and his nephew is set to go to the jury Thursday.
Before letting jurors go for the night Wednesday, U.S. District Judge Jeffrey L. Schmehl explained he will instruct the panel of six men and six women on the law first thing Thursday morning before sending them to the deliberation room in hopes of reaching a unanimous verdict.
Dougherty and Greg Fiocca — who have both denied the charges against them — are presumed innocent until the government proves them guilty beyond a reasonable doubt, the judge reminded the jury.
‘Angry words’ or a federal crime? Lawyers clash in closing arguments as John Dougherty extortion trial heads to jury
With their final pitches to jurors Wednesday, attorneys in John Dougherty’s federal extortion trial sought to cement two vastly different portraits of the former labor leader with the panel charged with rendering a verdict in the case.
As Assistant U.S. Attorney Frank Costello told it, Dougherty was an enabler, willing to overlook his nephew’s 2020 assault on a supervisor and use every tool at his disposal — including threats of economic harm — to keep him employed.
“No accountability. No responsibility,” the prosecutor said. “Apparently it’s okay to attack your bosses … especially if ... you’re John Dougherty’s nephew.”
Why this trial is in Reading
Unlike John Dougherty’s two earlier trials — both of which played out at the federal courthouse in Center City — his third will take place in Reading, starting with opening arguments there Wednesday, once jury selection in Philadelphia is done.
U.S. District Judge Jeffrey L. Schmehl, who has presided over all of Dougherty’s recent legal matters, is normally stationed at the small federal courthouse in downtown Reading.
He was randomly assigned to the case when Dougherty was indicted on bribery and embezzlement charges in 2019, and has traveled to Philadelphia for both of Dougherty’s weeks-long trials on those charges.
Who is Greg Fiocca?
Greg Fiocca, 31, is John Dougherty’s nephew and a former member of Local 98 who grew up in in Pennsport in the house next door to his uncle.
But despite Fiocca’s troubled work history, including altercations with former supervisors, Dougherty appointed him in 2020 to the plum posting as Local 98′s steward on Live! Casino’s project.
Fiocca’s brother, Brian, also an ex-member of the union, pleaded guilty to charges arising from Dougherty’s earlier embezzlement case and was sentenced to probation in March. And their sister, Maureen, was one of several Dougherty family members who prosecutors say the union head put on Local 98′s payroll for work they did not do.
— Jeremy Roebuck and Oona Goodin-Smith
Who is Johnny Doc?
John Dougherty, widely known as “Johnny Doc,” was once considered the most powerful union leader in the state, transforming Local 98 in his three decades at its helm into a powerhouse in the arenas of politics and organized labor.
Under his oversight, union money and manpower helped elect governors, members of Congress, mayors, judges, and members of City Council, and his once sleepy electrician’s union became a force capable of extracting significant labor concessions from some of the largest companies in the region.
But in recent years, Dougherty’s legacy has suffered a series of significant blows. He was forced to resign his post — as well as his leadership of the Philadelphia Building Trades Council, an umbrella group of building trades unions — after his 2021 conviction on bribery charges involving City Councilmember Bobby Henon. A separate jury convicted Dougherty last year on charges that he and six others stole more than $600,000 from their union.
What to know about John Dougherty's third trial
For a third time in as many years, John Dougherty is facing a federal felony trial — this time on conspiracy and extortion charges.
The former labor leader and his nephew, Greg Fiocca, are accused of threatening a contractor and a job site manager amid a dispute over Fiocca’s poor job performance and pay. Prosecutors say that while working on construction of the Live! Casino in South Philadelphia in 2020, Fiocca assaulted his supervisor and that Dougherty later threatened the block the contractor’s ability to land future work in Philadelphia.
But defense attorneys maintain the government has blown the argument out of proportion, turning what amounted to little more than a fistfight during a heated moment into a federal case. Dougherty, they contend, was simply doing his job: advocating on behalf of a member of Local 98 of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, the union he led for nearly 30 years.