New Details Unveil Murder of Former Mob Boss Whitey Bulger

Evidence reportedly suggests that inmates at the West Virginia prison where James “Whitey”Bulger, who had been beaten to death, was aware that he was being transferred into the facility prior to his arrival.

Bulger, 89-year-old Massachusetts-based organized crime boss, was murdered just hours after he was taken to USP Hazelton in Oct 2018. Bulger had ran what the FBI called the Irish mob in Boston in the 1970s and 1980s, but he also served as an informant for the bureau, disclosing information about the gang’s primary rival before later becoming one of the nation’s most-wanted fugitives before being arrested and convicted of 11 murders and other crimes. He was already serving a lifetime sentence in prison at the time he was murdered.

Bulger has always maintained that he wasn’t involved with the FBI. On an intake screening form he filled out after arriving at Hazelton, Bulger answered “no”When asked why he shouldn’t be included in the general population, he also replied “no” in a section asking if he ever assisted law enforcement in any way,CBS Newsreported.

Sean McKinnon is another Hazelton inmate. He is accused of being a watchman while Fotios were at work. “Freddy” Geas, 55,And Paul DeCologero, 48, allegedly beat Bulger to death, according to CBS. DeCologero, who is a member of a Massachusetts gang led by his uncle, was convicted of buying heroin that was used to attempt to kill a teenage girl his uncle feared would speak to the police against their gang, Fox Newsand The Boston Globereported. According to the outlet, another man broke her neck when heroin didn’t kill her.

Geas, authorities say, was a known Mafia hitman who, along with his brother, was sentenced to life in prison for the 2003 murder of Adolfo “Big Al” Bruno, a Massachusetts-based boss within the Genovese crime family, among other crimes. Fox reported that McKinnon, Geas’ cellmate at the time, pleaded guilty to taking dozens of handguns in 2015 from a Vermont firearms dealer.

All three men were charged with conspiracy to commit first-degree murder in connection with Bulger’s death, according to the Associated Press.

Geas and DeCologero were also charged with first-degree murder and assault resulting in serious bodily injuries. Geas will also be charged with murder by a federal inmate, which carries a life sentence.

McKinnon had a detention hearing regarding his conspiracy charge on Monday, according to the outlet.

Shortly before Bulger came to the facility, McKinnon told his mother on the phone that inmates had been preparing for a “higher profile person” to arrive, Assistant U.S. Attorney Hannah Nowalk said at a hearing in Ocala, Florida, according to a transcript obtained by AP News.

McKinnon told her that the person was Bulger and when she told him to stay away from him, McKinnon told his mother, “I can’t,” prosecutors said according to the transcript. According to the transcript McKinnon told his mother that he was likely to get into trouble. McKinnon replied, “Don’t worry. Oh, I don’t plan it.”

McKinnon’s mother also told the Boston Globe that her son told her he didn’t know anything about Bulger’s killing.

Surveillance video showed Geas and DeCologero entering Bulger’s cell around 6 a.m. the morning he was killed, with McKinnon sitting at a table that faces Bulger’s cell while the other two men were inside, authorities said. Nowalk said Geas and DeCologero were in Bulger’s cell for about seven minutes, and Bulger was found dead in his bed about two hours later, according to the court transcript.

An inmate witness also told the grand jury that when he asked McKinnon and DeCologero if they were who killed Bulger, they confirmed to be who were responsible for Bulger’s death, according to the AP. According to Nowalk, that same witness “then indicated that Pauly (DeCologero) told him that Bulger was a snitch…as soon as they saw Bulger come into the unit, they planned to kill him.”

“And then Pauly (DeCologero) told this inmate witness that Sean McKinnon was the lookout,” she said, according to the transcript.

Prosecutors say McKinnon told federal agents he was unaware of what happened to Bulger. He was on supervised release in Florida when he was arrested last week. He faces charges including conspiracy to commit first-degree murder as well as a separate charge of making false statements to a federal agent.

The transcript showed that McKinnon’s attorney, Christine Bird, told U.S. Magistrate Judge Philip Lammens that the phone call does not show he was involved in a plot to kill Bulger, saying that “the entire unit was alerted that Whitey Bulger was coming to the unit,”According to the outlet.

“The fact that his roommate was a henchman has nothing to do with him. He didn’t select his roommate. The fact that he knew that doesn’t really tell the Court that he was involved in the conspiracy,”Bird stated.

According to the outlet, during Monday’s hearing, the judge ruled that McKinnon should remain behind bars until his trial due to both his potential as a flight risk and threat to the community.

DeCologero has since been moved from Hazelton to another federal prison facility and Geas remains at Hazelton, according to the outlet.

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