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James "Whitey" Bulger Trial

Posted By: Wilson101

James "Whitey" Bulger Trial - 06/04/13 12:37 AM

http://www.foxnews.com/us/2013/06/03/murder-trial-reputed-mob-boss-whitey-bulger-to-begin-in-boston/

Trial is starting and their will be a special tonight (June 3) at 10pm on Investigation Discovery channel.

One of, if not the most shrewd and Machiavellian minds in the history of organized crime. A very interesting man.
Posted By: Wilson101

Re: James "Whitey" Bulger Trial - 06/04/13 12:41 AM

BOSTON – James "Whitey" Bulger is no longer the feared man who swaggered around South Boston and later became one of the nation's most-wanted fugitives.
At 83, the bright platinum hair that earned Bulger his nickname is all but gone and his reputed status as the leader of a violent gang has passed.
But as Bulger's long-awaited trial gets underway, it's clear that the passage of time has done little to diminish Boston's fascination with Bulger.
"He's a survivor. He's had a very long shelf life in a profession where that is not typical," said Dick Lehr, who has co-written two books about Bulger, including the biography "Whitey: The Life of America's Most Notorious Mob Boss."
"The many faces of Whitey make him intriguing," Lehr said.
Those faces include his early image as a modern-day Robin Hood and harmless tough guy who gave turkey dinners to his working-class neighbors at Thanksgiving and kept drug dealers out of the neighborhood. That image was crushed when authorities began digging up bodies.
Bulger would eventually be charged with playing a role in 19 murders but fled in late 1994 after former FBI Agent John Connolly Jr. tipped him off that he was about to be indicted. He remained a fugitive for more than 16 years before finally being captured in Santa Monica, Calif., in 2011.
Bulger's trial, set to begin this week with jury selection, promises to have all the glamour and gore of a TV mob drama. Prosecutors plan to call a collection of infamous mob figures, including Bulger's former partner, Stephen "The Rifleman" Flemmi, who is now serving a life sentence for 10 murders and admitted pulling the teeth out of some of the gang's victims, including his own girlfriend.
Former hit man John Martorano, who admitted killing 20 people, will also take the stand, as will Kevin Weeks, a former Bulger lieutenant who eventually led authorities to half a dozen bodies.
Bulger's lawyers have made it clear that they will attack the credibility of men they describe as "once-reviled criminal defendants" whom prosecutors have eagerly transformed into "loyal government witnesses."
"The government now offers these men as witnesses against James Bulger with no apparent regard for their complete lack of credibility," attorneys J.W. Carney Jr. and Hank Brennan wrote in a recent court filing.
Bulger, who grew up in a South Boston housing project, earned his first arrests as a juvenile and went on to serve time in Alcatraz and other federal prisons for bank robberies. He became one of the most notorious criminals in Boston, while his younger brother, William Bulger, became one of the most powerful politicians in Massachusetts, leading the state Senate for 17 years. William Bulger is expected to attend his brother's trial.
"If you go back to his childhood, he was nothing more than an incorrigible juvenile who was destined to go on to live a life of criminality, and that's exactly what he did," said Tom Duffy, a retired state police major who was one of the lead Bulger investigators.
Bulger, an inspiration for the 2006 Martin Scorsese film, "The Departed," headed the Winter Hill Gang, a largely Irish gang that ran loan-sharking, gambling and drug rackets.
"I think his basic credo was to live your life in a Machiavellian way. As a result of that, he put a great emphasis on intimidation and deception. He was a master at deception," Duffy said.
After Bulger went on the run, the public learned that he had been working as an FBI informant for years, providing information on the New England Mob — his gang's main rivals — even while he was committing a long list of his own crimes, including murder, prosecutors say.
The revelations of the corrupt relationship embarrassed the FBI and led to Connolly being convicted of racketeering.
Law enforcement officials who felt thwarted for years as they investigated Bulger say the trial may give them a long overdue sense of justice.
"We were frustrated because he was being protected by the FBI, but we didn't know to what extent," said retired state police Detective Lt. Bob Long, who investigated Bulger in the '70s and '80s.
Bulger's lawyers planned to use an immunity defense at his trial, arguing that federal prosecutor Jeremiah O'Sullivan, now deceased, granted Bulger immunity from prosecution for his crimes.
But Judge Denise Casper rejected that request, finding that any purported immunity agreement is "not a defense to the crimes charged."
Bulger's lawyers have also denied that he was an FBI informant. They've said Bulger will take the witness stand to testify in his own defense.
The defense is sure to emphasize for the jury how Martorano, Weeks and Flemmi all struck deals with prosecutors for reduced sentences in exchange for their cooperation. The defense has also indicated it plans to emphasize that Justice Department lawyers depicted the men as unreliable while defending lawsuits accusing the FBI of facilitating Bulger's crimes, but they are now using them as their star witnesses against Bulger.
"Mr. Bulger believes that he will have a fair trial if he is able to present the whole truth concerning his relationship with the Department of Justice and FBI, including that he was never an informant," Carney said in an email.
Prosecutors declined to comment before Bulger's trial.
For some of the victims' families, the trial is a chance to get answers.
Billy O'Brien was born four days after his father, William O'Brien, was gunned down in March 1973. Authorities say Bulger and his gang killed O'Brien and 10 others in a dispute with members of a rival group.
O'Brien never got to meet his father, but growing up in South Boston, he would see Bulger around the neighborhood.
"You'd have all this crazy stuff that runs through your head. You're seeing someone that's responsible for killing your father. You have all these things that come to you that you want to say, but I'm a kid then. What was I going to do?" O'Brien said.
"I want to know the reason why my father was killed," he said.
"I'm still looking for that to this day."


Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/us/2013/06/03/mur.../#ixzz2VCgiwfY2
Posted By: azguy

Re: James "Whitey" Bulger Trial - 06/04/13 03:30 PM

It'll be epic, maybe the organized trial of the century, an interesting witness list and whitey himself on the stand.

Can't wait !!
Posted By: Wilson101

Re: James "Whitey" Bulger Trial - 06/04/13 10:50 PM

James “Whitey” Bulger, the notorious Boston gangster accused of committing 19 murders, came face to face today with potential jurors in his trial, some of whom may eventually cast a vote to determine his fate.

“This is our client, James Bulger,” defense attorney J.W. Carney Jr. said, introducing Bulger to 225 prospective jurors this morning in US District Court in Boston.
“Good morning,” said the fit-looking 83-year-old Bulger, who was dressed in jeans, a long-sleeved navy jersey, white sneakers, a khaki-navy-striped belt, and wire-rimmed glasses.

The routine was the same this afternoon with another group of 225 prospective jurors. This time, Bulger said, “Good afternoon.”

A third batch of jurors is expected at the courthouse Wednesday. The selection of 18 impartial jurors from the pool of 675 is the first challenge in what is expected to be a lengthy, complex trial.

Bulger faces a federal racketeering indictment that alleges that he ran a criminal enterprise from 1972 to 2000. During his fearsome reign in Boston’s underworld, Bulger killed 19 people; extorted money from drug dealers, bookmakers, and businessmen; corrupted FBI and other law enforcement officials; laundered illegal profits; and stockpiled an arsenal of weapons, prosecutors allege.

“Both parties have the right to a jury that is fair and impartial, one that is not biased or partial one way or another. That is, both parties are entitled to a jury that does not have its mind made up one way or another,” US District Judge Denise J. Casper told the first batch of potential jurors this morning.

“The jury selection process that we are about to begin is to ensure fairness and impartiality at all ends,” Casper said.

Casper urged the jurors not to watch media coverage of the case, or to discuss it with anyone, and told them that they should make their decisions solely on the evidence presented to them in court. She told them the trial is expected to begin Monday and last to the end of September.

The jurors, after both the morning and afternoon sessions, were allowed to leave after filling out questionnaires. Casper emphasized that they should fill them out truthfully.

Defense lawyers, prosecutors, and Bulger went back into the courtroom after the morning session to continue battling over pretrial motions; they’re expected to continue to discuss pretrial motions at another hearing on Wednesday.

Bulger’s story took a twist when it was revealed that the gangster from South Boston had been an FBI informant from 1975 to 1990.

In 1995, Bulger fled the Boston area, tipped off by a corrupt FBI agent about an initial indictment. He remained on the lam for 16 years as the revelations emerged about his informant status and his closest associates turned on him, becoming government witnesses and implicating him in numerous slayings.

His story, which also included the parallel rise of his brother, William M. Bulger to be a powerful president of the Massachusetts Senate, has fascinated the public and inspired books and movies.

He was captured in June 2011 in Santa Monica, Calif., where he was living a modest life with his long-time girlfriend, Catherine Greig — and a large stockpile of cash and guns, authorities said.
Posted By: Joerusso

Re: James "Whitey" Bulger Trial - 06/05/13 12:59 AM

its rats after rats after rats he brings jerry and the anguilo's down dennis lepore granito old man zannino and the rest of the strong holders at the time a big blow for what a big nothing ...jerry and the rest of the crew wouldve still been investigated dont get me wrong and did little to no time but this fuckin guy puts a shotgun hole in the family ...yea we had capable people of keeping it strong but what he did was start a trend not only that he made button guys believe the hope is over gave them desparity made them feel weak in a sense esp how jr took helm and the war in late 80's into the 90's with the salemme regime and all that its unbelievable what he started and the inpact not on his victims but on my fathers whole generation and whole era he literally put a shotgun hole in it
Posted By: Wilson101

Re: James "Whitey" Bulger Trial - 06/05/13 02:57 AM

I dunno joe rousso. I don't condone what he did and I have personally spent time in state prison because of an informant, but at the end of the day crime is crime. It took me a long time to realize that in the underworld there is no honor, no loyalty, and they are all just jackals. Pure survival of the fittest. Look at the mafia you speak of, rules right? That's why you set your best friend up and then bury him in a ditch right? For the greater good of a secret society and the rules right? Well the rules were broken before they were made. We're talking about a world of crime and deceit and are we supposed to be surprised at someone's treachery?
I agree with you whitey was a rat and he destroyed a culture possibly, but in the underworld all bets or off. It is a total free for all, especially back in those days with how wide open everything was. He had the FBI under HIS controll too, do you think John Connolly leaned on him for information? Haha I seriously doubt it. In a world full of crime and scum and deceit he owned a whole city from pretty much the early 70s until 95 and then instead of getting clipped, begging the Feds for a reduced sentence in exchange for giving up the world, or rotting in jail, he goes on the run successfully for 16 years. I really can't think of anyone else who had a run like him honestly. Maybe kinda the chin but he didn't last as long and certainly didn't enjoy 16 years of retirement in San Diego.

Just to be clear I am def not condoning what this man did. I am actually almost off parole after giving up almost 4 years of my life to the state of NJ, all due to some animal who could not take a half ounce of coke on the chin. (He probably would have got probation but fuck me right). All I'm saying is bulger is a criminal genius and had one hell of a run. Shit, flemmi coulda ran too and he supposedly told weeks to "put it all on him" which weeks did and got off light.
Posted By: Wilson101

Re: James "Whitey" Bulger Trial - 06/06/13 01:49 AM

By Milton J. Valencia, Shelley Murphy and John R. Ellement, Globe Staff

James “Whitey” Bulger, the notorious Boston gangster who allegedly rampaged through Boston’s underworld for decades, is trying to exclude veteran Boston Globe columnist Kevin Cullen and reporter Shelley Murphy from covering his much-anticipated trial simply because he hates them, a federal prosecutor said today.

Assistant US Attorney Brian T. Kelly told a federal judge that the 83-year-old Bulger can be heard on jailhouse tape recordings describing his loathing for Cullen and Murphy, who recently published a book that chronicles Bulger’s career as a vicious criminal who worked as an informant for the FBI.

“It’s all over jailhouse tapes. He hates certain members of the media, including Murphy, Cullen and Howie Carr. Especially Howie Carr,’’ Kelly said, referring to Boston Herald columnist and talk show host Howie Carr. “He is trying to use this as a tool to kick out people the defendant doesn't like.’’

Kelly disclosed the information about the recorded conversations in a US District Court hearing as pretrial sparring continued before Judge Denise J. Casper, who is presiding over the Bulger trial and must decide whether to effectively ban the journalists because Bulger has put them on his witness list.

Prosecutors say Bulger is a vicious gangster. He is facing a 32-count federal racketeering indictment that alleges he participated in 19 murders in the 1970s and 1980s; extorted drug dealers, bookmakers, and businessmen; laundered his criminal profits through real estate transactions; and illegally stockpiled guns. His story, which has inspired a number of books and movies, took an additional twist after revelations in the 1990s that he had been working as an FBI informant during his reign of terror and after he successfully eluded a worldwide manhunt for years.

Bulger defense attorney J.W. Carney Jr. told Casper that he might call Cullen and Murphy as defense witnesses to impeach the testimony of prosecution witnesses Kevin Weeks, Stephen Rakes, and former State Police colonel Thomas J. Foley.

As such, Carney said, both Cullen and Murphy should be sequestered, and not allowed to cover the trial, nor should they be exposed to any media coverage of the trial.

“Let the record reflect I subscribe to The Boston Globe but that won’t prevent me from making any arguments,” Carney said to laughter from some in the courtroom, but not Bulger, who sat with his arms crossed, showing no obvious emotion.

Cullen and Murphy, who have covered the Bulger saga for the Globe for years, recently published “Whitey Bulger: America’s Most Wanted Gangster And The Manhunt That Brought Him to Justice.’’

“They are listed as witnesses, they are expected to be called as witnesses, and that’s the reason that the order of sequestration should apply to them,” Carney said.

Bulger has also asked that Carr and former Globe reporters Dick Lehr and Gerard O’Neill be sequestered as defense witnesses. Lehr and O’Neill covered Bulger while at the Globe and have authored books on him.

The Boston Globe, through attorney Jonathan Albano, urged Casper to reject Bulger’s request.

“The court should not be in the business of deciding which reporters will be allowed in and which should remain outside” Albano told Casper. “This isn’t about The Boston Globe’s rights. The individual journalists have rights.’’

Albano also said other journalists have interviewed the three men, not just Cullen and Murphy.

“They aren’t the only reporters who have talked to the government and other witnesses in the case,” Albano said. “That list is far and wide”

Casper took the matter under advisement.

Also today, the judge said she had increased the total number of people being screened for service as jurors to 775, up by about 100 people.

She said she expected to have attorneys give their opening statements next Wednesday, June 12.

Earlier today, a third batch of 225 jurors appeared in the Boston courthouse for the second day of jury selection in the Bulger trial.

Accompanied by his attorneys, Carney and Henry Brennan, the 83-year-old Bulger appeared to be wearing the same clothes as Tuesday -- white sneakers, jeans, and a long-sleeved dark shirt.

Casper, who is presiding over the historic trial, told the third pool of jurors the same thing she told two other pools on Tuesday.

“Both parties are entitled to a jury that is fair and impartial, one with no bias and no prejudice,” Casper said. “The jury is essential to the administration of justice under our system of law in the United States.”

Carney introduced Bulger to the prospective jurors, who will fill out a detailed questionnaire that marks the beginning of the winnowing process needed to select 12 jurors and six alternates for the one of the most closely watched trials in recent Massachusetts history.

Casper, prosecutors from US Attorney Carmen Ortiz’s office and Bulger’s lawyers will review the questionnaires from the large jury pool for the trial, which Casper said today will begin in earnest next week, and will last into September.

The jury will sit from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, and Friday, and from 9 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. on Thursdays.

Bulger was captured in Santa Monica, Calif., in June 2011 after more than 16 years on the run. He has pleaded not guilty to all charges and is being held without bail.

At the heart of the prosecution’s case is the allegation that Bulger, described by the FBI as a long-time informant, was protected from prosecution by corrupt FBI agents who took bribes and leaked information to him and fellow gangster and informant Stephen “The Rifleman” Flemmi that led them to kill people.

Bulger’s lawyers insist that Bulger was never an informant and that his lengthy FBI file is filled with information concocted by John J. Connolly Jr., the disgraced — and convicted — former agent listed as his handler.

Milton J. Valencia can be reached at mvalencia@globe.com. Follow him on Twitter @miltonvalencia. Shelley Murphy can be reached at shmurphy@globe.com. John R. Ellement can be reached at ellement@globe.com. Follow him on Twitter @JREbosglobe.
Posted By: Joerusso

Re: James "Whitey" Bulger Trial - 06/07/13 01:28 AM

Vegas your right i agree his run like no other very few if any hsd a run like he did after he took down anguilo he had a nice piece of the city thats for sure but not the whole thing he didnt have that much power but he did have a great way of manipultion in all fashion his fbi connections was one in a million so his reign of terror was unique and i too is under a big situation because of a rat and my family father and uncle in particular are effected by RATS in their time so i felt the wrath of a rat/informant but yea i agree strongly with whitey stronghold on his empire was like no other the way he manipulated and schemed his life of crime was picture perfect
Posted By: Wilson101

Re: James "Whitey" Bulger Trial - 06/08/13 02:13 AM

(CNN) -- Reputed Boston mob boss and longtime fugitive James "Whitey" Bulger is the defendant in a sensational murder and racketeering trial, but proceedings Friday in federal court had one prosecutor choking up with emotion while defending the work of another law enforcement officer.
And that moment came before a jury has even been seated.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Fred Wyshak choked up during arguments in the case as he defended one of his main investigators, Massachusetts Lt. Steve Johnson.
Wyshak was responding to a defense claim that one of the key witnesses in the case may have been involved in further criminal activity since his release from federal prison in 2007, and that a member of the Massachusetts State Police claimed the investigation into that defense witness' activities was compromised.
In court, Bulger attorney Henry Brennan said the state trooper who complained felt "undermined by one of his superiors, Steve Johnson." Brennan says the trooper was "not only undermined....so discontent he made complaints."
The defense witness, John Mortorano, has admitted he killed 20 people as part of Bulger's criminal organization that ruled south Boston for decades. He was released as part of a plea deal in exchange for his testimony.
Wyshak acknowledged in court that the Massachusetts state police investigated claims from "sources" that Mortorano was again involved in criminal activity after he was freed. Wyshak said the investigation included "numerous interviews" and that the "allegations were unfounded," calling the accusations "a lot of smoke."
Wyshak said the information was turned over to the defense in May.
What apparently wasn't turned over was an additional internal state police investigation into Johnson's handling of the case.
Wyshak, addressing U.S. District Court Judge Denise Casper, became emotional as he defended Johnson, calling him, "one of the best law enforcement officers I know."
Wyshak said the the internal investigation found complaints against Johnson were "unsubstantiated" and that the "real villain is the state trooper" who he says "went off the deep-end" and denied the allegations when confronted.
Wyshak said that trooper faces disciplinary action.
The judge did not rule on whether the defense is entitled to documents pertaining to the internal investigation.
The conduct of law enforcement is key in the case since prosecutors allege a corrupt FBI agent aided Bulger in his criminal actives while Bulger himself was a government informant.
The Friday back-and-forth came as the two sides attempt to seat a 18-member jury, including six alternates, in the high-profile case.
One hundred and 50 potential jurors whose questionnaires passed muster will be further scrutinized on Monday.
Bulger was arrested in California in 2011 after 16 years on the run. Now 83, he's charged in the killings of 19 people during his days as the leader of south Boston's Winter Hill gang.
Federal prosecutors say Bulger led the Irish mob from the late 1970s through the mid-1990s. But after Bulger fled impending racketeering charges, investigators found he had been an FBI informant whose handler tipped him off about the charges -- a tale that became the inspiration for the Oscar-winning 2006 drama "The Departed."
Posted By: Wilson101

Re: James "Whitey" Bulger Trial - 06/08/13 02:19 AM

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BOSTON — Even if the slight, bespectacled old guy who smiled as he wished prospective jurors a good morning were the only other soul in a subway car after midnight, you might not bother to watch him out of the corner of your eye. At 83, accused crime boss James “Whitey” Bulger is awfully thin, and nearly bald. In white tennis shoes and jeans held up with a cotton belt, he’s clean-shaven these days, and with his arms crossed over his chest at the defense table, utterly unintimidating.

James “Whitey” Bulger in a booking photo taken in June of 2011. (AP)

The racketeering case he goes on trial for here this week reaches back four decades. It reanimates a world of fedora-wearing gangsters with nicknames like “The Rifleman,” and at least one woman, Bulger’s second-favorite mistress, Catherine Greig, who’d wait up all night in full makeup keeping a second dinner warm.
The 19 murders and other crimes the Winter Hill Gang’s reputed boss is charged with may as well have happened on another world, too, since the now spiffy waterfront neighborhood around the new Southie courthouse near where Bulger grew up is as changed as the defendant — built over, buffed up, and renamed Seaport.
“It used to be scary to come down here when we were kids,” says retired Norfolk County prosecutor Matt Connolly (no relation to Bulger’s FBI handler, John Connolly, who’s already doing time). Matt Connolly, who spent much of his career trying to build a case against Bulger, is in the courtroom to see how the story ends; in his telling, the FBI wasn’t about to let him get near its prized source of bad information, and intervened as necessary.
That’s why the bureau will be on trial here, too, in the court of public opinion, anyway. At a time when its officials stand accused of both trampling civil liberties and blowing off intelligence that the Russians claim could have headed off the Marathon bombings, it might be easier to find 12 jurors and six alternates with an open mind about Bulger, a man accused of killing two 26-year-old women with his bare hands.
Throughout his adult life, the defendant has been connected in multiple ways; his brother, William “Billy” Bulger, was the president of the Massachusetts Senate and president of the University of Massachusetts. But surely the most over-the-top aspect of his whole cinematic saga is how, back when the FBI’s top priority was going after La Cosa Nostra, the head of the equally deadly Irish mob could have been recruited to inform on his Italian rivals, and purportedly allowed to use the assignment as a tidy formula for killing some enemies, then informing his handlers that other enemies were responsible.
Most remarkable of all to me is that even after the Boston Globe first published a report that Bulger was an FBI informant in 1988, absolutely nothing changed, because even the mob couldn’t believe the FBI would be so venal as to throw in with a guy like him.

Somehow, Bulger is both denying he was ever a government informant and, at least according to the prosecution, still angling to cite the immunity deal he says he was promised as his defense. U.S. District Judge Denise Casper has ruled that the defendant’s 700-page FBI informant file can be admitted as evidence, but that any immunity agreement is “not a defense to the crimes charged.”
Still, both the prosecution and the defense will be hitting as hard as they can on the theme of government corruption, with the state arguing that some of the crimes happened as a direct result of the FBI’s corrupt deal with Bulger.
Though he says he’s innocent of all 32 criminal counts against him, it’s the killing of Debra Davis and Deborah Hussey that he most vehemently denies, according to letters obtained by journalists at the Boston Globe. Davis was his partner Steve Flemmi’s girlfriend, who was trying to break up with him, and Hussey the daughter of another of Flemmi’s companions. Her crime was accusing Flemmi, who has pleaded guilty to 10 murders, of sexually assaulting her from the time she was a kid.
In Bulger’s preferred version of his career, however, he stayed true to his own code and would never hurt a woman. He also likes to position only woman left in his own life as his reason to stay alive now.
When Bulger’s common-law wife, Teresa Stanley, grew tired of life on the run, just a month after he disappeared in 1995, he dropped her back off in Boston and picked up Catherine Greig, who spent the next 16 years in hiding with him and was arrested with him in Santa Monica two years ago this month.
According to the excellent “Whitey Bulger: America’s Most Wanted Gangster and the Manhunt that Brought him to Justice,” by Boston Globe journalists Kevin Cullen and Shelley Murphy, Bulger these days paints himself as all about protecting the love of his life, determined to “hang in there for Catherine’s sake,” until she gets out of prison in eight years.
Maybe you’re thinking the state will need to locate some jurors from another time and place, because everybody in Boston has surely heard about Bulger, on whom the Jack Nicholson character in the movie “The Departed” was loosely based. (Incredibly, the same FBI unit that worked with Bulger — and tipped him off that he was going to be arrested — was put in charge of searching for him after he left town, and even ignored a report that he’d shown up for the San Diego opening of “The Departed,” according to Murphy and Cullen’s book.)
But Judge Casper tried to sell potential jurors on the benefits of sitting on a jury on a trial expected to last four months: “Your participation in this case — or frankly, any case — is no small thing,” she acknowledged. Yet jurors often say it turns out to have been “one of the most interesting of their lives.” (You said a mouthful there, your honor.)
Then Bulger’s attorney, J.W. Carney Jr. said, “I’m pleased to introduce our client, Mr. James Bulger,” and the slight man with a big reputation greeted a group of those who will write the ending for Bulger’s story.
Melinda Henneberger is a Post political writer and She the People anchor who has spent the last semester as a fellow at the Harvard Kennedy School’s Shorenstein Center. Follow her on Twitter at @MelindaDC.
Posted By: abc123

Re: James "Whitey" Bulger Trial - 06/09/13 01:42 AM

Was he a real rat or not ? i mean FBI man who had him on the books was working for him was he not ? so was he on FBI books as a rat to cover him self ?
Posted By: Joerusso

Re: James "Whitey" Bulger Trial - 06/09/13 05:08 PM

Originally Posted By: abc123
Was he a real rat or not ? i mean FBI man who had him on the books was working for him was he not ? so was he on FBI books as a rat to cover him self ?
good thinking and theory but he was a rat for the simple fact he and flemmi threw names and gave up info ..what people fail to realize is that he gave flemmi gave all the info it was flemmi who knew the italians and dealt with us not no damn bulger bulger didnt know anybody and was never trusted all bulger had was flemmi when it came to In Town bulger had his caniving manipulating ways but never dealt with the italians but did rat and was an informer yea did he try to cover himself by being an informant on paper yea but he gave info lots of info minor but still info ..if he sat back been informant on paper giving no information at all just receiving and using the agents to his dealings and benefit THEN you can say he was using the the agents to cover up but he didnt
Posted By: azguy

Re: James "Whitey" Bulger Trial - 06/09/13 05:12 PM

Russo is correct, it was Flemmi that visited the North End all the time, him and Salemme were tight and since he was Italian he was viewed as a solid guy that knew the deal. It was disclosed that Flemmi drew the picture of the office on Prince Street so they knew where to place the bugs.

Bulger was smart enough to use him for his dirty work with the Italians.
Posted By: Wilson101

Re: James "Whitey" Bulger Trial - 06/10/13 04:11 AM

Great article
http://www.nydailynews.com/news/crime/wh...ticle-1.1367313
Posted By: Wilson101

Re: James "Whitey" Bulger Trial - 06/10/13 04:21 AM

Written by how've Carr FYI so take it for what it's worth lol
Posted By: DickNose_Moltasanti

Re: James "Whitey" Bulger Trial - 06/10/13 04:21 AM

Originally Posted By: VegasMikey


Thanks Vegas Mikey Blackjack!
Posted By: Wilson101

Re: James "Whitey" Bulger Trial - 06/11/13 06:31 PM

Jury selection complete, trial is starting.
Posted By: Joerusso

Re: James "Whitey" Bulger Trial - 06/11/13 06:40 PM

yes it is mikey and tomorrow is opening statements cant wait and out boy howie carr has a seat in one of the few public or media seats lol cant wait to hear the play by play commentary on twitter like it was a ball game lmaol
Posted By: SharpieOne

Re: James "Whitey" Bulger Trial - 06/11/13 07:10 PM

If anyone wants to follow this trial over twitter, send me a DM. I'll give you the best names to follow.
Posted By: azguy

Re: James "Whitey" Bulger Trial - 06/11/13 07:31 PM

Can't wait until Flemmi gets on stand, will be epic !
Posted By: Joerusso

Re: James "Whitey" Bulger Trial - 06/11/13 07:49 PM

the best names to follow is laurel_sweet and howiecarrshow they are the ones in the courtroom during everything like looking at whitey bulger in the face i know howie carr is like fuck you whitey who is laughing now lmaol
Posted By: Joerusso

Re: James "Whitey" Bulger Trial - 06/11/13 07:55 PM

the opening statements start tomorrow and the courtroom live tweets said it was screaming match between the lawyers and da and the d.a. said something about " hope this dont continue" the screaming match and the lawyer said " it is ".....the judje casper ( black lady ) and j.w. carney whitey lawyer weas also having a screaming match lol and one of howie carr fans is a alternate juror lmaol told howie in court he is a big fan dont be suprised lawyer puts in motion to ban him from jury since whitey and howie carr had their own feud going on for the last 25 years or so
Posted By: Camarel

Re: James "Whitey" Bulger Trial - 06/11/13 08:55 PM

Originally Posted By: Joerusso
the opening statements start tomorrow and the courtroom live tweets said it was screaming match between the lawyers and da and the d.a. said something about " hope this dont continue" the screaming match and the lawyer said " it is ".....the judje casper ( black lady ) and j.w. carney whitey lawyer weas also having a screaming match lol and one of howie carr fans is a alternate juror lmaol told howie in court he is a big fan dont be suprised lawyer puts in motion to ban him from jury since whitey and howie carr had their own feud going on for the last 25 years or so


After reading your comments i feel like i've missed out because you clearly have alot to say but after a couple of sentences i get a headache and forget what i just read lol
Posted By: Joerusso

Re: James "Whitey" Bulger Trial - 06/11/13 09:07 PM

well let me know when this an essay or 5 page report so i can use punctuation and proper fragmenst and senstences ...i think yous forget that we are on a forum and this is a forum for information based on topic not proper typing and standard form
Posted By: Mick7

Re: James "Whitey" Bulger Trial - 06/12/13 02:06 PM

http://bostonherald.com/news_opinion/local_coverage/2013/06/live_coverage_whitey_bulger_trial
Posted By: Camarel

Re: James "Whitey" Bulger Trial - 06/12/13 02:13 PM

Originally Posted By: Joerusso
well let me know when this an essay or 5 page report so i can use punctuation and proper fragmenst and senstences ...i think yous forget that we are on a forum and this is a forum for information based on topic not proper typing and standard form


confused
Posted By: Joerusso

Re: James "Whitey" Bulger Trial - 06/12/13 02:30 PM

3 bodies moved from 799 E. Third Street on Halloween 1985. "Weeks will tell you about this gruesome task." Bucky, Hussey, McIntyre.Expand Collapse Reply Retweet Retweeted
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1 Retweet 4:24 AM - 12 Jun 13 · Details Howie Carr ‏@HowieCarrShow 6m Now showing chart of South Boston Drug Network. Much of this opening is in Rifleman. Billy Shea will testify, Whitey's top coke dealer.Expand Collapse Reply Retweet Retweeted Delete Favorite Favorited More Email Tweet Embed Tweet Laurel J. Sweet ‏@Laurel_Sweet 8m #Bulger showing no reaction, no interest in Kelly's vivid, gruesome descriptions of the slaughters and mutilations.
Posted By: Joerusso

Re: James "Whitey" Bulger Trial - 06/12/13 02:35 PM

Bookie Dick O'Brien will be one of first witnesses. Friend of Johnny Martorano. Lives in West Palm now.Expand Collapse Reply Retweet Retweeted
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Email Tweet Embed Tweet Howie Carr ‏@HowieCarrShow 55m AUSA Kelly leads with Bucky Barrett murder case... "a group of criminals who ran amuk in the city of Boston for 30 years...." Stole 50K.
Posted By: Joerusso

Re: James "Whitey" Bulger Trial - 06/12/13 02:36 PM

Opening instructions.... "unregistered machineguns.... firearms with obliterated and/or altered serial numbers...." Jurors can talk Bruins!Expand Collapse Reply Retweet Retweeted Delete Favorite Favorited More Email Tweet Embed Tweet Laurel J. Sweet ‏@Laurel_Sweet 1h At least one juror for #Bulger, one of seven women on the panel of 18, already furiously scribbling notes during Judge Casper's case outline
Posted By: Joerusso

Re: James "Whitey" Bulger Trial - 06/12/13 02:37 PM

Mike Barnicle refuses to believe Whitey -- er, Jimmy -- had anything to do with drugs. Jimmy kept the drugs out of Southie, didn't he?Expand Collapse Reply Retweet Retweeted Delete Favorite Favorited More Email Tweet Embed Tweet Howie Carr ‏@HowieCarrShow 52m "Bulger liked to promote the myth that he had nothing to do with drugs but he made millions in their distribution, particularly of cocaine."
Posted By: Joerusso

Re: James "Whitey" Bulger Trial - 06/12/13 02:43 PM

Carr ‏@HowieCarrShow 33m South Boston Liquor Mart "obtained with dirty money and the help of a handgun." Original owner Stippo Rakes will testify.Expand Collapse Reply Retweet Retweeted Delete Favorite Favorited More Email Tweet Embed Tweet Howie Carr ‏@HowieCarrShow 38m "William St. Croix, different last name but nonetheless the son of Stevie Flemmi...." murders of Debs will be coming soon.Expand Collapse Reply Retweet Retweeted Delete Favorite Favorited More Email Tweet Embed Tweet Howie Carr ‏@HowieCarrShow 45m Eddie Connors, Bulldogs on Savin Hill, took phone call "but there was no phone call, instead death came calling in the form of this man."Expand Collapse Reply Retweet Retweeted Delete Favorite Favorited More Email Tweet Embed Tweet Laurel J. Sweet ‏@Laurel_Sweet 46m ... by machine gun in Northern Avenue in 1982.#BulgerExpand Collapse Reply Retweet Retweeted Delete Favorite Favorited More Email Tweet Embed Tweet Laurel J. Sweet ‏@Laurel_Sweet 48m Tommy Donahue, one of alleged #Bulger victim Michael Donahue's three sons, rocking back and forth as Kelly describes his day's death by ...Expand Collapse Reply Retweet Retweeted Delete Favorite Favorited More Email Tweet Embed Tweet Howie Carr ‏@HowieCarrShow 48m Mentions Michael Milano murder, Sparhawk Street in Brighton, shot by mistake, other guy in the car paralyzed, female in car will testifyExpand Collapse Reply Retweet Retweeted Delete Favorite Favorited More Email Tweet Embed Tweet Howie Carr ‏@HowieCarrShow 49m "This little murder spree had been going on since the 1970's but some of the murder victims were just in the wrong place at the wrong time."
Posted By: Joerusso

Re: James "Whitey" Bulger Trial - 06/12/13 02:45 PM

Donahue returns and gets a reassuring squeeze on the left arm from Steve Davis, brother of alleged #Bulger victim Debra Davis.Expand Collapse Reply Retweet Retweeted
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Email Tweet Embed Tweet Boston Herald News ‏@bh_mobile 1m Bulger prosecutor: ‘A case about organized crime, public corruption and all sorts of illegal activities’ http://bit.ly/13CnAms #BH_NewsExpand Collapse Reply Retweet Retweeted Delete Favorite Favorited More Email Tweet Embed Tweet Boston Herald News ‏@bh_mobile 1m Opening statements begin in Bulger trial in Boston http://bit.ly/19qe3Fc #BH_NewsExpand Collapse Reply Retweet Retweeted Delete Favorite Favorited More Email Tweet Embed Tweet Boston Herald News ‏@bh_mobile 1m Norman Mailer's Cape Cod home for sale http://bit.ly/13CnA5Q #BH_NewsExpand Collapse Reply Retweet Retweeted Delete Favorite Favorited More Email Tweet Embed Tweet Boston Herald News ‏@bh_mobile 1m Live coverage: Whitey Bulger trial http://bit.ly/16dBWMr #BH_NewsExpand Collapse Reply Retweet Retweeted Delete Favorite Favorited More Email Tweet Embed Tweet Howie Carr ‏@HowieCarrShow 1m "Bulger was never an informant. JB is of Irish descent and the worst thing an Irish person can do is become an informant." Yeah, right.Expand Collapse Reply Retweet Retweeted Delete Favorite Favorited More Email Tweet Embed Tweet Howie Carr ‏@HowieCarrShow 2m Zip Connolly and O'Sullivan are being talked about now. No mention of H. Paul Rico. Zip "was FBI golden boy. All this went to his head."Expand Collapse Reply Retweet Retweeted Delete Favorite Favorited More Email Tweet Embed Tweet Boston Herald ‏@bostonherald 4m JUST IN: Bulger prosecutor: ‘A case about organized crime, public corruption and all sorts of illegal activities’... http://fb.me/JGblQoJd Expand Collapse Reply Retweet Retweeted Delete Favorite Favorited More Email Tweet Embed Tweet Laurel J. Sweet ‏@Laurel_Sweet 6m Tommy Donahue walks out of #Bulger trial courtroom during Carney's opening statement.Expand Collapse Reply Retweet Retweeted Delete Favorite Favorited More Email Tweet Embed Tweet Howie Carr ‏@HowieCarrShow 6m Carney: "What Hank (Brennan) and I are gonna show you is what goes on in the prosecutors' kitchen." Now on 60's RFK crusade v. LCNExpand Collapse Reply Retweet Retweeted Delete Favorite Favorited More Email Tweet Embed Tweet Laurel J. Sweet ‏@Laurel_Sweet 9m #Bulger lawyer J.W. Carney speaks of how his team had to "dig" into the case. The ultimate poor choice of words!Expand Collapse Reply Retweet Retweeted Delete Favorite Favorited More Email Tweet Embed Tweet Howie Carr ‏@HowieCarrShow 9m Jay Carney now: thanks jury on his behalf and "Jim's behalf." Jackie Bulger looks stunned. Carney: "We're gonna be together for months."Expand Collapse Reply Retweet Retweeted Delete Favorite Favorited More Email Tweet Embed Tweet Boston Herald ‏@bostonherald 10m Czechs present bicycle that can fly http://bit.ly/18x3D7t Expand Collapse Reply Retweet Retweeted Delete Favorite Favorited More Email Tweet Embed Tweet Boston Herald News ‏@bh_mobile 10m Czechs present bicycle that can fly http://bit.ly/16dztBM #BH_NewsExpand Collapse Reply Retweet Retweeted Delete Favorite Favorited More Email Tweet Embed Tweet ESPNBoston ‏@ESPNBoston 11m Patriots blog: Tebow contract details http://es.pn/16dzpSx View summary Hide summary Reply Retweet Retweeted Delete Favorite Favorited More Email Tweet Embed Tweet Howie Carr ‏@HowieCarrShow 15m "Bulger runs away and hides, for almost 16 years, in California. But then honest FBI agents tracked him down."Expand Collapse Reply Retweet Retweeted Delete Favorite Favorited More Email Tweet Embed Tweet Boston Herald ‏@bostonherald 16m Bulger prosecutor: ‘A case about organized crime, public corruption and all sorts of illegal activities’: Open... http://bit.ly/13CnAms Expand Collapse Reply Retweet Retweeted Delete Favorite Favorited More Email Tweet Embed Tweet Boston Herald ‏@bostonherald 16m Opening statements begin in Bulger trial in Boston: BOSTON — Opening statements in the highly anticipated rac... http://bit.ly/19qe3Fc Expand Collapse Reply Retweet Retweeted Delete Favorite Favorited More Email Tweet Embed Tweet Boston Herald ‏@bostonherald 16m Norman Mailer's Cape Cod home for sale: PROVINCETOWN, Mass. — Norman Mailer's children have put the two-time ... http://bit.ly/13CnA5Q Expand Collapse Reply Retweet Retweeted Delete Favorite Favorited More Email Tweet Embed Tweet Laurel J. Sweet ‏@Laurel_Sweet 16m One young male #Bulger juror appears to be catching up on his sleep!Expand Collapse Reply Retweet Retweeted Delete Favorite Favorited More Email Tweet Embed Tweet Howie Carr ‏@HowieCarrShow 19m 3 bodies moved from 799 E. Third Street on Halloween 1985. "Weeks will tell you about this gruesome task." Bucky, Hussey, McIntyre.Expand Collapse Reply Retweet Retweeted Delete Favorite Favorited More Email Tweet Embed Tweet Howie Carr ‏@HowieCarrShow 22m Now showing chart of South Boston Drug Network. Much of this opening is in Rifleman. Billy Shea will testify, Whitey's top coke dealer.Expand Collapse Reply Retweet Retweeted Delete Favorite Favorited More Email Tweet Embed Tweet Laurel J. Sweet ‏@Laurel_Sweet 24m #Bulger showing no reaction, no interest in Kelly's vivid, gruesome descriptions of the slaughters and mutilations.Expand Collapse Reply Retweet Retweeted Delete Favorite Favorited More Email Tweet Embed Tweet WhiteHouseDown ‏@WHD 10 Jun WATCH and RETWEET this new 4 minute trailer from #WHD starring @ChanningTatum & @iamJamieFoxx – in theaters June 28! http://bit.ly/115smdZ Promoted by WhiteHouseDown Dismiss

View media Hide media Reply Retweet Retweeted Delete Favorite Favorited More Email Tweet Embed Tweet Howie Carr ‏@HowieCarrShow 25m Deb Hussey: "a much tougher death, a death at the hands, literally the hands, of this man."Expand Collapse Reply Retweet Retweeted Delete Favorite Favorited More Email Tweet Embed Tweet Howie Carr ‏@HowieCarrShow 28m Another victim: John McIntyre, he arrived with a case of beer "but there was no party, just the man sitting over there...." Next Deb HusseyExpand Collapse Reply Retweet Retweeted Delete Favorite Favorited More Email Tweet Embed Tweet ESPNBoston ‏@ESPNBoston 30m Bruins getting ready to make some Stanley Cup memories in T-minus 10 hours http://es.pn/18wYA6Y Expand Collapse Reply Retweet Retweeted Delete Favorite Favorited More Email Tweet Embed Tweet Howie Carr ‏@HowieCarrShow 33m Joe Murray gave 50 lbs. of cocaine to Kevin Weeks. "He also buried bodies for Bulger." Lookout on Halloran hit, Weeks there at 799 E. Third.Expand Collapse Reply Retweet Retweeted Delete Favorite Favorited More Email Tweet Embed Tweet ESPNBoston ‏@ESPNBoston 35m Red Sox left-hander Jon Lester offers no defense for awful outing against Rays @GordonEdes
http://es.pn/18wXkki Expand Collapse Reply Retweet Retweeted Delete Favorite Favorited More Email Tweet Embed Tweet Howie Carr ‏@HowieCarrShow 36m South Boston Liquor Mart "obtained with dirty money and the help of a handgun." Original owner Stippo Rakes will testify.Expand Collapse Reply Retweet Retweeted Delete Favorite Favorited More Email Tweet Embed Tweet Howie Carr ‏@HowieCarrShow 40m "William St. Croix, different last name but nonetheless the son of Stevie Flemmi...." murders of Debs will be coming soon.Expand Collapse Reply Retweet Retweeted Delete Favorite Favorited More Email Tweet Embed Tweet Howie Carr ‏@HowieCarrShow 48m Eddie Connors, Bulldogs on Savin Hill, took phone call "but there was no phone call, instead death came calling in the form of this man."Expand Collapse Reply Retweet Retweeted Delete Favorite Favorited More Email Tweet Embed Tweet Laurel J. Sweet ‏@Laurel_Sweet 49m ... by machine gun in Northern Avenue in 1982.#BulgerExpand Collapse Reply Retweet Retweeted Delete Favorite Favorited More Email Tweet Embed Tweet Laurel J. Sweet ‏@Laurel_Sweet 50m Tommy Donahue, one of alleged #Bulger victim Michael Donahue's three sons, rocking back and forth as Kelly describes his day's death by ...Expand Collapse Reply Retweet Retweeted Delete Favorite Favorited More Email Tweet Embed Tweet Howie Carr ‏@HowieCarrShow 50m Mentions Michael Milano murder, Sparhawk Street in Brighton, shot by mistake, other guy in the car paralyzed, female in car will testifyExpand Collapse Reply Retweet Retweeted Delete Favorite Favorited More Email Tweet Embed Tweet Howie Carr ‏@HowieCarrShow 51m "This little murder spree had been going on since the 1970's but some of the murder victims were just in the wrong place at the wrong time."Expand Collapse Reply Retweet Retweeted Delete Favorite Favorited More Email Tweet Embed Tweet Boston Herald News ‏@bh_mobile 58m SJC orders retrial for $81M in punitive damages in tobacco case http://bit.ly/19q0eqw #BH_NewsExpand Collapse Reply Retweet Retweeted Delete Favorite Favorited More Email Tweet Embed Tweet Howie Carr ‏@HowieCarrShow 59m Mike Barnicle refuses to believe Whitey -- er, Jimmy -- had anything to do with drugs. Jimmy kept the drugs out of Southie, didn't he?Expand Collapse Reply Retweet Retweeted Delete Favorite Favorited More Email Tweet Embed Tweet Howie Carr ‏@HowieCarrShow 1h "Bulger liked to promote the myth that he had nothing to do with drugs but he made millions in their distribution, particularly of cocaine."Expand Collapse Reply Retweet Retweeted Delete Favorite Favorited More Email Tweet Embed Tweet ESPNBoston ‏@ESPNBoston 1h There's already been a lot of pumping of tires between Tuukka Rask and Corey Crawford @ESPNJoeyMac http://es.pn/13Ca3eu Expand Collapse Reply Retweet Retweeted Delete Favorite Favorited More Email Tweet Embed Tweet Howie Carr ‏@HowieCarrShow 1h Bookie Dick O'Brien will be one of first witnesses. Friend of Johnny Martorano. Lives in West Palm now.Expand Collapse Reply Retweet Retweeted Delete Favorite Favorited More Email Tweet Embed Tweet Howie Carr ‏@HowieCarrShow 1h AUSA Kelly leads with Bucky Barrett murder case... "a group of criminals who ran amuk in the city of Boston for 30 years...." Stole 50K.Expand Collapse Reply Retweet Retweeted Delete Favorite Favorited More Email Tweet Embed Tweet Boston Herald News ‏@bh_mobile 1h Facing controversy, Obama political value unclear http://bit.ly/12m5ad3 #BH_NewsExpand Collapse Reply Retweet Retweeted Delete Favorite Favorited More Email Tweet Embed Tweet Boston Herald ‏@bostonherald 1h Facing controversy, Obama political value unclear http://bit.ly/16dkXtU Expand Collapse Reply Retweet Retweeted Delete Favorite Favorited More Email Tweet Embed Tweet Boston Herald News ‏@bh_mobile 1h SJC orders retrial for $81M in punitive damages in tobacco case http://bit.ly/16dkXdi #BH_NewsExpand Collapse Reply Retweet Retweeted Delete Favorite Favorited More Email Tweet Embed Tweet Boston Herald News ‏@bh_mobile 1h Court hears arguments on NYC's big soda ban http://bit.ly/12m54Cj #BH_NewsExpand Collapse Reply Retweet Retweeted Delete Favorite Favorited More Email Tweet Embed Tweet ESPNBoston ‏@ESPNBoston 1h Bill Belichick put a lid on Tebow-mania in a hurry @MikeReiss http://es.pn/194hJtP Expand Collapse Reply Retweet Retweeted Delete Favorite Favorited More Email Tweet Embed Tweet ESPNBoston ‏@ESPNBoston 1h Bruins' defense-first approach got them to finals, but we didn't expect the D-men to score, too (Jackie MacMullan) http://es.pn/10bMD2Z Expand Collapse Reply Retweet Retweeted Delete Favorite Favorited More Email Tweet Embed Tweet Laurel J. Sweet ‏@Laurel_Sweet 1h Casper tells jurors, "You will never have to explains your verdict to anyone."#BulgerExpand Collapse Reply Retweet Retweeted Delete Favorite Favorited More Email Tweet Embed Tweet Jon Lee ‏@aTrueLEEder 1h Headed to workRetweeted by Tom Layman
Expand Collapse Reply Retweet Retweeted Delete Favorite Favorited More Email Tweet Embed Tweet Boston Herald ‏@bostonherald 1h SJC orders retrial for $81M in punitive damages in tobacco case: Massachusetts’ highest court yesterday threw ... http://bit.ly/19q0eqw Expand Collapse Reply Retweet Retweeted Delete Favorite Favorited More Email Tweet Embed Tweet Howie Carr ‏@HowieCarrShow 1h Opening instructions.... "unregistered machineguns.... firearms with obliterated and/or altered serial numbers...." Jurors can talk Bruins!Expand Collapse Reply Retweet Retweeted Delete Favorite Favorited More Email Tweet Embed Tweet Laurel J. Sweet ‏@Laurel_Sweet 1h At least one juror for #Bulger, one of seven women on the panel of 18, already furiously scribbling notes during Judge Casper's case outlineExpand Collapse Reply Retweet Retweeted Delete Favorite Favorited More Email Tweet Embed Tweet BC Interruption ‏@bcinterruption 1h Grape job, you guys! "UConn qualifies academically for postseason" http://bostonherald.com/sports/college/c..._for_postseason …Expand Collapse Reply Retweet Retweeted Delete Favorite Favorited More Email Tweet Embed Tweet Howie Carr ‏@HowieCarrShow 1h Billy Bulger does not "deem it appropriate" to attend the openings. 3 Whitey witnesses -- me, Cullen, O'Neill -- are in the overflow room.Expand Collapse Reply Retweet Retweeted Delete Favorite Favorited More Email Tweet Embed Tweet Laurel J. Sweet ‏@Laurel_Sweet 1h #Bulger, 83, charged with 19 murders, racketeering, conspiracy, extortion, money laundering, firearms possession.Expand Collapse Reply Retweet Retweeted Delete Favorite Favorited More Email Tweet Embed Tweet Your timeline is currently empty. Follow people and topics you find interesting to see their Tweets in your timeline.
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Posted By: Joerusso

Re: James "Whitey" Bulger Trial - 06/12/13 02:46 PM

Boston Herald ‏@bostonherald 5m JUST IN: Bulger prosecutor: ‘A case about organized crime, public corruption and all sorts of illegal activities’... http://fb.me/JGblQoJd Expand Collapse Reply Retweet Retweeted Delete Favorite Favorited More Email Tweet Embed Tweet Laurel J. Sweet ‏@Laurel_Sweet 7m Tommy Donahue walks out of #Bulger trial courtroom during Carney's opening statement.Expand Collapse Reply Retweet Retweeted Delete Favorite Favorited More Email Tweet Embed Tweet Howie Carr ‏@HowieCarrShow 8m Carney: "What Hank (Brennan) and I are gonna show you is what goes on in the prosecutors' kitchen." Now on 60's RFK crusade v. LCNExpand Collapse Reply Retweet Retweeted Delete Favorite Favorited More Email Tweet Embed Tweet Laurel J. Sweet ‏@Laurel_Sweet 10m #Bulger lawyer J.W. Carney speaks of how his team had to "dig" into the case. The ultimate poor choice of words!Expand Collapse Reply Retweet Retweeted Delete Favorite Favorited More Email Tweet Embed Tweet Howie Carr ‏@HowieCarrShow 11m Jay Carney now: thanks jury on his behalf and "Jim's behalf." Jackie Bulger looks stunned. Carney: "We're gonna be together for months."
Posted By: Joerusso

Re: James "Whitey" Bulger Trial - 06/12/13 03:10 PM

One of the Marshals assigned to the courtroom to keep the untethered #Bulger in check sits beside the jury.Expand Collapse Reply Retweet Retweeted
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Email Tweet Embed Tweet Howie Carr ‏@HowieCarrShow 7m "... randomly as the mood befit him. He would kill people as easily as we would order a cup of coffee."Expand Collapse Reply Retweet Retweeted Delete Favorite Favorited More Email Tweet Embed Tweet Howie Carr ‏@HowieCarrShow 8m Carney: "It would be fair to say that Martorano is the scariest, most dangerous, psychopathic criminal in Boston history. He killed almost..Expand Collapse Reply Retweet Retweeted Delete Favorite Favorited More Email Tweet Embed Tweet Howie Carr ‏@HowieCarrShow 12m Whitey didn't get tip from Zip, just heard about arrests on radio. "It was something as mundane as that." Laughter in overflow room.Expand Collapse Reply Retweet Retweeted Delete Favorite Favorited More Email Tweet Embed Tweet Howie Carr ‏@HowieCarrShow 13m Carney: "Bulger made millions upon millions upon millions of dollars." So why are we paying for Whitey's lawyer?Expand Collapse Reply Retweet Retweeted Delete Favorite Favorited More Email Tweet Embed Tweet Howie Carr ‏@HowieCarrShow 15m Now Carney's onto O'Sullivan. He never brought a case. O'Sullivan is dead. "You'll know the depth of corruption in federal law enf. here."Expand Collapse Reply Retweet Retweeted Delete Favorite Favorited More Email Tweet Embed Tweet
Posted By: Joerusso

Re: James "Whitey" Bulger Trial - 06/12/13 03:11 PM

"Barboza was the mentor of John Martorano. And like Barboza, Martorano was just as much of a psychopath, a soulless kiler w/out conscience."
Posted By: Joerusso

Re: James "Whitey" Bulger Trial - 06/12/13 03:12 PM

Howie Carr ‏@HowieCarrShow 3m Now Carney is blaming Martorano for what Barboza did in the Deegan hit, sending 4 innocent men to prison for 30 years. Reaching much here?Howie Carr ‏@HowieCarrShow 9m "... randomly as the mood befit him. He would kill people as easily as we would order a cup of coffee."Expand Collapse Reply Retweet Retweeted
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Email Tweet Embed Tweet Howie Carr ‏@HowieCarrShow 9m Carney: "It would be fair to say that Martorano is the scariest, most dangerous, psychopathic criminal in Boston history. He killed almost..Expand Collapse Reply Retweet Retweeted Delete Favorite Favorited More Email Tweet Embed Tweet Howie Carr ‏@HowieCarrShow 13m Whitey didn't get tip from Zip, just heard about arrests on radio. "It was something as mundane as that." Laughter in overflow room
Posted By: cornerkid

Re: James "Whitey" Bulger Trial - 06/12/13 03:56 PM

This whole fuckin trial is a joke. The FBI has some balls acting like they weren't the fuel to Bulgers Fire. I hear they want to parade all the victims families up to testify. Talk about prejudicial, the guy hasnt even been convicted yet and they want to bring up victim impacts? FUCKIN SCAM. The FBI cant get it right so they put on this dog and pony show.
Posted By: Wilson101

Re: James "Whitey" Bulger Trial - 06/12/13 08:08 PM

Yep
Posted By: Wilson101

Re: James "Whitey" Bulger Trial - 06/13/13 12:27 AM


7
At trial, feds paint 'mayhem' of mobster 'Whitey' Bulger
G. Jeffrey MacDonald, USA TODAY 1:27 p.m. EDT June 12, 2013
James "Whitey" Bulger is no saint, prosecutors and his lawyers agree. They differ on whether his old mob pals are the best witnesses against him in his trial on 19 murder charges and other crimes.


(Photo: AP)
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
Bulger was arrested in 2011 in California
He disappeared in 1994 after being tipped that he would be indicted
He's accused of leading the feared Winter Hill Gang
BOSTON — James "Whitey" Bulger made "millions upon millions" in the 1970s and '80s by operating a bunch of criminal enterprises and paying off law enforcement agents — but the guys who call him a ruthless murderer can't be trusted to tell the truth.

That's how Bulger's attorney, J.W. Carney, made the case for his client Wednesday during opening arguments in the long-awaited trial of the 83-year-old Bulger, who was on the FBI's most-wanted list for more than a decade.

"They've done a lot of negotiating with the witnesses, (and) things have evolved with the witnesses," Carney said. "We're going to try to show you what happens in the prosecutors' kitchen."

Assistant U.S. Attorney Brian Kelly told jurors that Bulger wasn't just overseeing bookies, drug dealers and other illegal affairs. He stockpiled weapons, extorted millions from those who crossed his cronies and participated — sometimes brutally — in 19 grisly murders, Kelly said.

"That's what we're dealing with in this case," he said, "a hands-on killer who was the leader of a criminal enterprise."

The case brings to trial the reputed kingpin of the Winter Hill Gang, an Irish mob that allegedly worked closely with the Italian mafia. Victims' family members are hoping for an overdue day of justice that many thought, during the 16 years when Bulger was on the run, might never come.

In reviewing photos and video of alleged mobsters in 1980, jurors began what is forecast to be a summer-long journey back in time to a rough period in Boston's history.

From Carney, they heard about a Federal Bureau of Investigation so riddled with corruption that agents would routinely turn blind eyes to illicit activities and didn't care whether witnesses were truthful.

From Kelly, they heard how those who posed threats or crossed Bulger's crew would be handcuffed to chairs, questioned, strangled or shot, buried in South Boston basements — and later exhumed and reburied so new homeowners wouldn't find them.

"At the center of all this murder and mayhem was one man: James 'Whitey' Bulger," Kelly said.

Both sides agree that Bulger is no saint. They disagree about the nature of his relationship with the FBI and the trustworthiness of his closest partners in crime.

Carney disputed prosecutors' claims that Bulger was a longtime FBI informant. He said law enforcement, including FBI agent John Connolly — later convicted of murder, racketeering and other crimes — was simply "on the payroll" so Bulger could avoid indictment, be alerted when a search was coming and get a heads-up as to where the bugs were planted to record his conversations.

So extensive was the corruption, Carney argued, that Bulger didn't need to hide as a most-wanted fugitive.

"He settled in California," Carney said. He was "not hiding, (but) living openly in plain sight for the next 16 years while those former FBI agents, I submit, pretended to look for him."

He also suggested the prosecution's star witnesses — Bulger associates John Martorano, Stephen "The Rifleman" Flemmi and Kevin Weeks — would agree to lie and implicate Bulger in order to minimize their own prison sentences.

But litigation expert Alan Dershowitz says the government's witnesses, who've already been sentenced, "have nothing to gain by lying. If they lie, they lose their deals." And the fact that they're criminals doesn't necessarily quash their credibility.

"If you're going to prosecute the devil, you don't go to heaven for witnesses," said Dershowitz, a professor at Harvard Law School. "You go to hell for witnesses."

Kelly foreshadowed a parade of witnesses who will testify to Bulger's wrath: a bookie and a businessman who paid hefty sums to stay alive; a hit man who helped hide the boss' personal stash of guns; a former customs agent familiar with Bulger's attempt to ship a boat filled with weapons to the Irish Republican Army.

Kelly kept the focus on the most heinous crimes of which Bulger is accused. He described in graphic detail what happened to some of the victims, whose pictures appeared on a screen for the jury. For John McIntyre, he described an end that was crude and painful.

"The defendant, James Bulger, tried to choke him with a rope, but the rope was too thick," Kelly said. "So Bulger asks him: Do you want one in the head? 'Yes, please.' So Bulger shoots him in the head."
Posted By: Wilson101

Re: James "Whitey" Bulger Trial - 06/13/13 02:03 AM

Whitey Bulger was a 'charismatic killer'
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
NEW: James "Whitey" Bulger was a "hands-on" killer, prosecutor says
NEW: Defense attorney says he was a criminal but not a killer
He has pleaded not guilty to 19 murder charges, other counts
The 83-year-old was captured in 2011 after 16 years in hiding
Boston (CNN) -- If you lived in South Boston from the late 1970s through the mid-1990s, you either loved or loathed Whitey Bulger.
He could be colorful and generous, or, if you were his enemy, it is said he could be cutthroat and cruel.
In a federal courtroom in Boston on Wednesday, James "Whitey" Bulger, who spent more than 16 years in hiding, finally faced the judicial system.
Charged with murder in the killings of 19 people, Bulger, wearing jeans and a green, long-sleeved T-shirt, listened intently as prosecutors and his lawyers gave opening statements.
Photos: American gangsters
Photos: Famous manhunts
2012: 'Whitey' Bulger: A life of crime
With references to Robert Kennedy, La Cosa Nostra and the "Troubles" in Northern Ireland, the trial of Boston's most famous fugitive got under way.
Bulger, 83, who prosecutors said was the head of the Irish mob in Boston for nearly two decades, sat slightly hunched, watching grainy black-and-white surveillance videos of him as he appeared more than 30 years ago, trimmer and only slightly balding. In one of the clips, Bulger punches the air and uses his fingers as guns as he animatedly talks to several mob associates.
Describing Bulger as a "hands-on killer," prosecutor Brian Kelly told the jury Bulger "did the dirty work himself." He described how Bulger ruthlessly shot one mob associate after attempts to strangle him failed because the rope he was using was too thick.
"You want one to the head?" Bulger reportedly said. "Yes, please," the victim was said to have answered.
Describing another killing, Kelly said, "Death came calling in the form of Whitey Bulger," who allegedly lured his victim to a phone booth and then opened fire, along with partner Steve "The Rifleman" Flemmi.
The trial is expected to take up to three months and has the potential to reveal sensational details about the mob and FBI corruption, especially if Bulger chooses to testify.
His attorney, J.W. Carney, portrayed Bulger not as a killer but as the head of a successful criminal enterprise of drug trafficking, extortion and loan sharking that brought in "millions upon millions of dollars." His client would not leave his "comfort zone" to kill someone in another state, as prosecutors allege.
Carney took aim at rogue FBI agents and police who were on "Bulger's payroll," both to protect him and to alert him to impending wiretaps, surveillance efforts and indictments.
The government will try to show that Bulger committed crimes while working as an informant for the FBI, revealing to the feds the mafia's secrets and corrupting them in the process to ignore his crimes.
Bulger never worked as an informant, Carney said, adding that "the worst thing" a person of Irish descent could do would be to inform.
But the defense acknowledged for the first time that Bulger was involved in drug trafficking and that he made millions of dollars from it.
The defense blamed the cooperating witnesses for the killings, saying they are falsely blaming Bulger for their own acts.
Carney urged the jurors to be skeptical about the credibility of the government's planned witnesses.
"Would you believe them beyond a reasonable doubt when you add the unbelievable incentives the government has given them?" he asked.
Bulger rose to the top of the notorious Winter Hill gang, prosecutors say, before he went into hiding for more than 16 years after an FBI agent told him in December 1994 that he was about to be indicted on federal racketeering charges.
But Carney claimed Bulger fled not because he was given the heads up on an impending indictment, but because he heard on the radio that federal agents were rounding up mobsters, an account heard for the first time ever.
Bulger was captured in Santa Monica, California, two years ago, living under a false name with his girlfriend in an apartment in the oceanside city.
At his July 2011 arraignment, he pleaded not guilty to the 19 murder charges and 13 other counts.
In the pretrial hearings, Bulger had argued he was given immunity by the FBI and a former prosecutor. A judge dismissed the claim, saying any purported immunity was not a defense against the crimes Bulger faces.
Besides the slayings, Bulger is accused of using violence, force and threats to shake down South Boston's bookmakers, loan sharks and drug dealers. The Irish mob allegedly laundered its ill-gotten gains though liquor stores, bars and other property it owned in South Boston.
"The guy is a sociopathic killer," Tom Foley, the organized crime investigator who spent most of his career with the Massachusetts State Police trying to put Bulger behind bars, told CNN in 2011. "He loved that type of life. He's one of the hardest and cruelest individuals that operated in the Boston area. He's a bad, bad, bad guy."
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Former Boston Globe reporter Dick Lehr, who wrote a book about Bulger, described him as a coldblooded killer whose gang went to lengths to avoid detection.
"When they killed someone -- this is pre-DNA -- they pulled the teeth out, cut the fingers off, tried to make it so the victims, if they were discovered from their graves, couldn't be identified. There's just no bottom. It doesn't get much uglier than someone like Whitey Bulger," Lehr said.
Few people knew Bulger was a rat.
FBI agent John Connolly, who was raised in the same housing projects as Bulger, cut a deal with the alleged mob figure in 1975. Bulger would give information about the Italian mob -- the FBI's prime target -- authorities said.
Protected by the rogue FBI agent, Bulger got names of other informants who had dirt on him and rival gang members, people he is accused of killing.
He knew when police were watching, knew when they were moving in.
After he fled Boston, he spent more than a decade on the FBI's Top 10 Most Wanted Fugitives list before his 2011 capture.
His girlfriend, Catherine Greig, was sentenced to eight years in prison last summer for helping him evade capture.
Connolly is serving a 50-year sentence for second-degree murder and racketeering.
Prosecutors plan to call as many as 80 witnesses. Among them will be Connolly and Flemmi, who was also an informant for the FBI. He is serving life terms without parole but avoided a possible death sentence by cooperating in the hunt for Bulger.
On Wednesday, Carney called Flemmi "a psychopath without a conscience."
Other former Bulger associates are expected to be called by the prosecution.
Last August, Carney said his client planned to testify.
"At this point in his life, his goal is to have the truth come out regarding how he was able to act with impunity for so long in the city of Boston," Carney told CNN affiliate WCVB-TV.
Posted By: Mick7

Re: James "Whitey" Bulger Trial - 06/13/13 06:41 PM

Trial already heating up on day 2. Retired Col. Foley of state police having to back track a lot on what he is testifying today and to what he wrote in his book. Said today Jimmy Martorano brokered the deal between John Martorano and the Govt. When pressed on why they did not go after Howie Winter Or Pat Nee, Foley basically clams up and says lack of "resources". I think all of these books are going to come back and haunt these guys or I should say haunt the Govt.
Posted By: Wilson101

Re: James "Whitey" Bulger Trial - 06/14/13 11:57 PM

Bookies testified today
http://abcnews.go.com/US/whitey-bulger-snickers-witness-recalls-death-threat/t/story?id=19404209
Posted By: Wilson101

Re: James "Whitey" Bulger Trial - 06/15/13 12:01 AM

Two former bookmakers from the 1970s and 1980s told a federal jury Friday that they were forced to make payments to James “Whitey” Bulger and his crew, and that the gangster and his cohorts had a reputation for hurting anyone who did not follow their demands.

“I had heard about them because their reputation preceded them. They were very capable,” said Richard O’Brien, 84, who ran gambling rackets for years and said he was forced into a meeting with Bulger in the mid-1970s.

“You’re working alone ... you ought to be with us,” Bulger told him, O’Brien recalled.

“They were laying down the law,” he told a jury in federal court in Boston.

James Katz, another bookmaker, said he dealt often with Bulger’s right-hand man, Stephen “The Rifleman” Flemmi, and it was his understanding that Flemmi and Bulger ran their gang together.

“You knew Stevie Flemmi had a reputation that he had killed several people?” Bulger’s lawyer, J.W. Carney Jr. asked.

“I would never want to run into him,” Katz acknowledged.

Bulger, 83, is on trial in US District Court, charged in 32 counts of a racketeering indictment that alleges that while running a criminal enterprise from 1972 to 2000, he participated in 19 murders; extorted bookmakers and drug dealers, and businessmen; laundered his criminal profits through real estate transactions; and stockpiled an arsenal of weapons.

Katz told jurors that he paid $500 a month — $1,000 a month during football season — in “rent” to Bulger’s gang, and often drove directly to Bulger’s headquarters in a garage near the old Boston Garden to make the payment.

He also testified that Flemmi and Bulger increased the amount of money that gamblers would have to pay to place a bet, putting more money in their gang’s pockets. And he said that Bulger funded local loansharks.

Katz said people who crossed Flemmi and Bulger were skirting danger. “You can wind up in the hospital, so to say,” he said.

Under Carney’s cross-examination, Katz acknowledged that he had given differing accounts of how many times he had met Bulger. He also acknowledged that his dealings were not with Bulger but with Flemmi and others who claimed to be working for Bulger’s gang, which he called “The Bulger Group.”

Katz, now 72, was placed in a witness protection program as part of his agreement with prosecutors to cooperate and testify against Bulger. He pleaded guilty in 1992 in federal court to gambling, money laundering, and wire fraud, and was sentenced to four years in prison. He also had to forfeit $1 million from a check cashing scheme that he acknowledged laundered millions of dollars.

Katz had a history of gambling convictions in state court and had served months-long prison sentences. “Story of my life,” he said.

But federal prosecutors brought a federal case against him and used the threat of longer prison sentences to pressure him to testify against higher-level criminals.

Katz was initially reluctant to testify, even with the protection of an immunity agreement. He was held in contempt of court, and threatened with an additional 18 months in prison beyond his four-year term.

Then Katz agreed to cooperate, saying he feared prosecutors would seek the forfeiture of his home. He has a wife and three children.

Carney suggested that Katz was shaping his testimony to implicate Bulger so that he could satisfy his agreement with prosecutors to provide “substantial assistance.”

Prosecutors say Bulger was a ruthless killer who terrorized Boston’s underworld for decades. His legend grew when he eluded a worldwide manhunt for 16 years after his indictment in 1995 and when it was learned that he had been protected by the FBI, which considered him a prized informant. The story of his criminal rise, which paralleled the political ascent of his brother, former state Senate President William M. Bulger, has inspired books, TV shows, and movies.

On Thursday, the jury heard from Thomas J. Foley, a retired Massachusetts State Police colonel who testified that FBI agents constantly sabotaged his efforts to target Bulger, forcing investigators to rely on a hitman and other unsavory characters to build a case against the gangster and expose his corrupt relationship with the bureau.

Bulger’s defense team tried to use Foley’s testimony to argue that the FBI was so corrupt in its handling of the notorious South Boston gangster that its claim that he was an informant should not be believed. The defense also grilled Foley about whether the prosecution team let hitman-turned-government witness John Martorano refuse to testify against his friends, as long as he cooperated against Bulger.
Posted By: Wilson101

Re: James "Whitey" Bulger Trial - 06/15/13 03:55 AM

This seems to be the best article on day 3


Boston (CNN) -- In many respects it was like a meeting of old friends: James "Whitey" Bulger listening carefully -- laughing heartily at one point -- to colorful recollections of former Boston bookie Richard O'Brien, who ran a successful bookmaking operation that he inherited from his father.
But this was no remember-when reunion between two elderly men.
The 84-year-old O'Brien, who lives in Florida and uses a wheel chair, testified Friday as a prosecution witness at the federal trial of Bulger, who is charged in the deaths of 19 people during the nearly two decades that prosecutors say he was the head of the Irish mob in Boston.
O'Brien described a meeting between Bulger and a man who owed him money. When the man balked at paying, Bulger replied, "We have a business besides bookmaking." "What's that?" the man asked. "Killing (expletive) like you."
The 83-year-old Bulger, who has shown little emotion in the first days of trial, threw his head back and let out a laugh.
Whitey Bulger in hiding
O'Brien said he was an "independent" bookmaker, or unaffiliated with a crime organization, when Bulger summoned him to a meeting to discuss joining the Bulger group.
O'Brien said had been working for the Italian mafia in Boston's North End but Bulger told him, "Forget the North End. If you want to be in business, you have to be with us."
He had no choice but to join Bulger's Winter Hill gang, O'Brien testified, saying, "Their reputation preceded them."
O'Brien then referenced Boston's violent gang wars saying, "A lot of people were shot. Mr. Bulger ended up on top. You can draw your own conclusions."
Thus began a 14-year relationship, with O'Brien testifying he paid Bulger's group a couple of thousand dollars, cash, in "rent" virtually every month.
Asked why, O'Brien replied, "I valued my life as well as those with me."
The monthly payment went in excess of $2,000, O'Brien said, and was sometimes higher because Bulger and partner Steven "The Rifleman" Flemmi would charge random "taxes" if, for example, one of O'Brien's workers found himself at the end of a government wiretap.
Bulger never personally took the money, which was always paid in cash. It was always handed to Bulger's partner, Flemmi. "Maybe he never wanted it entered into evidence," O'Brien offered.
O'Brien said he moved to Florida in the early '90s, turning over the day-to-day operations of his bookmaking business to one of his six daughters. Several years later, he said, he was summoned to a meeting with Flemmi amid rumblings that Bulger associates -- including a "father-and-daughter team" -- were starting to cooperate with the government.
He said before he left for the meeting he told his daughter, "If I'm not back in 12 hours go to the FBI in Miami. Don't go home (to Boston). Don't go to the FBI there."
O'Brien is expected to continue testifying Monday.
Jurors earlier heard testimony from retired Massachusetts State Police Col. Thomas Foley, who on Thursday described the FBI's informant program as "poorly run."
"The FBI put a higher priority protecting their informants" than they did protecting "public safety," Foley said.
Bulger's lawyers are trying to show Bulger was allowed to act with impunity, sanctioned by corrupt FBI agents and federal prosecutors.
On cross-examination Bulger attorney Hank Brennan questioned Foley about the integrity of Bulger's FBI informant file, which is likely to be introduced at trial, asking the retired investigator why he would accept the informant file as accurate when it was compiled by the same FBI agents Foley believed were lying to him.
Foley said he had other sources but acknowledged he had never checked the validity of the entire file.
Bulger's lawyers also are trying to establish that Bulger was never a paid informant for the FBI and that instead Bulger was the one paying rogue agents for information.
The trial is expected to take up to three months and has the potential to reveal sensational details about the mob and FBI corruption, especially if Bulger chooses to testify.
Bulger was in hiding for 16 years before he was captured in Santa Monica, California, two years ago, living under a false name with his girlfriend in an apartment in the oceanside city.
At his July 2011 arraignment, he pleaded not guilty to the 19 murder charges and 13 other counts.
Posted By: Joerusso

Re: James "Whitey" Bulger Trial - 06/17/13 04:15 PM

today is very interesting in the trial here is some quotes from johnny martorano himself on the standshowing MIchael Milano's bullet-riddled Mercedes. You can still see the bullet holes in the wall at Sparhawk and Market. #whiteytrialA "boiler," Martorano explained, was a stolen car that carried "all the guns."#Bulgerfirst killing: Michael Milano, mistake, bartender of Angeli's. Sparhawk Street in Brighton. other guy in car paralyzed, woman wounded.Howie Carr ‏@HowieCarrShow 14m Now Indian War after Mafia bookie Paulie Folino murdered by Al Angeli. Winter Hill handled wiping out Indian Al's gang.Howie Carr ‏@HowieCarrShow 26m murder of Jack Banno outside the Sugar Shack. "He came at me with a knife. I was on a date with a lady. I took the knife and stabbed him."one of the dead was a woman. JM: I felt terrible. I wanted to shoot myself but I can't change it." On to the NEGRO shootings by Campbells.Going over early victims, bobby Palladino, John Jackson, Anthony Veranis....#whiteytrial
Posted By: Joerusso

Re: James "Whitey" Bulger Trial - 06/17/13 04:18 PM

Going over the gangs of the early 60's. Very familiar if you've read #Hitman. Roxbury gang, Barboza gang, Howie Winter... #bulgertrialMarshals just had to intercept a man who walked up to witness stand and asked Martorano for his autograph during a break in #Bulger.Howie Carr ‏@HowieCarrShow 1h JM split a $110,000 advance with HC. Describes me as "a local writer for the Herald around here." #bulgertrial #whiteyWyshak: Did you anyone ever pay you to kill people? JM No. Wyshak: Why was book named Hitman." JM: He thought it would sell better."GK films paid $250,000 to date for rights to life. you hope they make a movie. "I'm hopin'."Expand Collapse Reply Retweet Retweeted Delete Favorite Favorited More Email Tweet Embed Tweet Howie Carr ‏@HowieCarrShow 1h Asked for lump sum $20,000 "to get started when I come out of jail." #whiteytrial
Posted By: Joerusso

Re: James "Whitey" Bulger Trial - 06/17/13 04:22 PM

Howie Carr ‏@HowieCarrShow 1h Martorano got $6000 in commissary money from DEA while in prison for "toothbrushes, soap." wouldn't go in witness protection #whiteytrialHowie Carr ‏@HowieCarrShow 1h confessed to 8 more murders during debriefing on the 60's when not member of Winter Hill gang. never been charged "never. 8 victims named.Laurel J. Sweet ‏@Laurel_Sweet 1h #Bulger initially stole a look at Martorano, but is back to staring straight ahead. Prosecutor Fred Wyshak handling directJM says he provided info against Hill members Howie Winter and Pat Nee (sure to be point of contention in cross.) #whiteytrial #bulgerOn Flemmi & Bulger: "They were my partners in crime, my best friends, my children's godfathers." "It broke my heart" to learn they're rats.
Posted By: Joerusso

Re: James "Whitey" Bulger Trial - 06/17/13 04:25 PM

Howie Carr ‏@HowieCarrShow 2h O'Brien saved from Flemmi "by the good graces of John Martorano." #whiteytrial.O'Brien felt responsible for Tara's nervous breakdown because O'Brien said go to FBI in Miami 10-12 hours if I don't come back #whiteytrial.O'Brien admits he pulled one of his six daughters into the business because he needed someone he could trust.#BulgerCarney: You were very uncomfortable with Stevie Flemmi?" O'Brien: "At times." O'Brien knew he'd killed his girlfriend. #whiteytrial
Posted By: Joerusso

Re: James "Whitey" Bulger Trial - 06/17/13 04:34 PM

O'Brien blamed dying George Kaufman for collecting rent. O'Brien says working for Angiulos vs. Whitey was "like black and whiteAngiulos didn't charge rent, just wanted bets, "businesslike." "All Stevie and Whitey cared about was the 'rent.'" #whiteytrial #bulgerO'Brien started out with Bernie McGarry, but he went to prison. His agents were defecting so he decided to go to "The Man." #whiteytrialThe Man sent O'Brien to the Angiulos, never lost agents anymore. got to be friendly with Peter Limone, framed for 30 years. #whiteytrialEarly 70's needed layoff, Winter Hill wanted O'Brien. Said: "Everybody's gotta be with somebody." Carney brings up Johnny, O'Brien resists.Winter HIll said to O'Brien: "You wear the white hat, we wear the black hat." In other words, we handle the muscle. #whiteytrial #bulgerO'Brien was a bookie who believed in customer satisfaction. His father, who taught him the 'biz, said ...#BulgerWhen Bobby O'Connor Southie bookie retired O'Brien absorbed his agents. Now talking about deadbeat lawyer who said he's related to Whitey.Timilty was last name of agent who dealt with deadbeat lawyer who owed 4K and claimed Bulger was his relative. #whiteytrial #bulgerwieCarrShow 2h Invoking the Hill when collecting: "the best out I had was, would you like to talk to people from Winter Hill? 'No Dick, we'll settle it.'"
Posted By: Joerusso

Re: James "Whitey" Bulger Trial - 06/17/13 04:35 PM

#Bulger jury just shown dead body in trunk of stolen car that kids in Charlestown unwittingly stole after it was dumped in projects.
Posted By: Mick7

Re: James "Whitey" Bulger Trial - 06/17/13 06:05 PM

Can Howie Winter be prosecuted by any of Martorano's testimony today? Martorano had never testified to Howie pulling the trigger in the other trials and he did today on two hits. Martorano has said he is not a rat because he was telling on the two biggest rats, who were ratting on everyone else. Pretty sure he just ratted out Howie.
Posted By: Dellacroce

Re: James "Whitey" Bulger Trial - 06/18/13 02:19 AM

Martorano-12 years for over 20 murders, what a fucking deal.
Posted By: Wilson101

Re: James "Whitey" Bulger Trial - 06/18/13 06:35 AM

Martorano is Gd up lol
Posted By: Dellacroce

Re: James "Whitey" Bulger Trial - 06/18/13 05:46 PM

Really makes me wonder why the govt made that deal. 12 years for some1 who killed more than 20 people wtf they already had bulgers top 2 guys flemmi and weeks to testify who probly had more knowledge of bulgers killings. They couldve left that scumbag to rot in prison and had just as strong a case.
Posted By: LittleNicky

Re: James "Whitey" Bulger Trial - 06/18/13 06:33 PM

Man respect Joe for all the updates.
Posted By: Wilson101

Re: James "Whitey" Bulger Trial - 06/18/13 11:21 PM

Bump
Posted By: Giancarlo

Re: James "Whitey" Bulger Trial - 06/18/13 11:31 PM

Can't wait to see Whitey take the stand. Should be good.

Martorano's a mass murderer, Whitey will just say it was him who killed the guy on his own. Two murdering maniac rats putting the rap on each other.
Posted By: paddy78

Re: James "Whitey" Bulger Trial - 06/24/13 03:43 PM

tHIS TRIAL ia basically gonna end up with everyu reported putting a book out, all detailing the same hum drum bs thats been reported for 20 yrs, over and over! its pathetic but the only story i want to hear or read is that of whitey himself! i cant wait, should be great
Posted By: Wilson101

Re: James "Whitey" Bulger Trial - 06/26/13 12:22 AM

I agree patty
Posted By: Dapper_Don

Re: James "Whitey" Bulger Trial - 06/26/13 01:03 AM

Originally Posted By: paddy78
tHIS TRIAL ia basically gonna end up with everyu reported putting a book out, all detailing the same hum drum bs thats been reported for 20 yrs, over and over! its pathetic but the only story i want to hear or read is that of whitey himself! i cant wait, should be great


Agreed.
Posted By: bronx

Re: James "Whitey" Bulger Trial - 06/26/13 05:18 AM

lets see how tough or how long it would have taken him to rat if he did not have l.e. protect him and give him info.. why was he an informant, because he did not want to go to prison..he would have been pinched 40 years ago and nobody would know him today..whitey who? a lot of people would be alive today.. at 83 years old and never going to prison, he should say the truth and write books, instead of blaming everyone but himself..
Posted By: southend

Re: James "Whitey" Bulger Trial - 06/28/13 01:35 PM

Is Stevie Flemmi set to testify in this trial? I've heard nothing about him being supposed to get on the stand, just Martorano and Weeks. Flemmi would be interesting eventhough he's extremely dull on the stand
Posted By: azguy

Re: James "Whitey" Bulger Trial - 06/28/13 06:40 PM

Originally Posted By: southend
Is Stevie Flemmi set to testify in this trial? I've heard nothing about him being supposed to get on the stand, just Martorano and Weeks. Flemmi would be interesting eventhough he's extremely dull on the stand


He's going to testify, the Herald has said it a few times in their coverage. I'm not sure who will be more exciting; him or Weeks, it should be great...

Flemmi is really an idiot, If you recall he was answering questions, I think in the Connolly case, and when they asked him who killed "so'n'so" he starts with his 5th amendment sh&t.
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