Bulger killers formally charged

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Rocco
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Re: Bulger killers formally charged

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Ivan wrote: Thu Aug 18, 2022 3:07 pm MacKinnon was arrested in Florida by the feds there, the other two were already incarcerated (Geas at least is doing life, dunno about the Patriarca dude).
Paul is serving a life sentence as well. His cousin who was part of his crew was recently arrested on drug charges ..dude was only out of jail for a rear and a half after serving 19yrs for the same indictment Paul is doing life on.
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Re: Bulger killers formally charged

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Luca wrote: Thu Aug 18, 2022 6:08 pm That Decologero guy was about to get released soon. What a waste…
I thought he got life for that girls murder? or was that his dad?
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Re: Bulger killers formally charged

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:ugeek:
Rocco wrote: Fri Aug 19, 2022 7:43 am
Luca wrote: Thu Aug 18, 2022 6:08 pm That Decologero guy was about to get released soon. What a waste…
I thought he got life for that girls murder? or was that his dad?

I am pretty sure he was set to be released in 2026 after doing over 20 years. If I was that close the last thing I would do is be involved in a murder. He’s gotta have some regret, or he could just be a psychopath.
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Re: Bulger killers formally charged

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something doesn't make sense with paul decolegro. something just doesn't add up as he shoudl be getting out soon. From what ive read, he had a quite a social life on the outside w plenty of money.
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JerryB
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Re: Bulger killers formally charged

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Published September 2, 2022 2:00am EDT
James 'Whitey' Bulger killing: Son of Boston mobster's accused hitman seeking answers for delay in charges
James 'Whitey' Bulger slaying: Why the reputed Boston mobster's alleged murderers were not charged until years later

EXCLUSIVE DETAILS: A son of one of the men accused of killing James "Whitey" Bulger after the reputed mob boss was discovered bludgeoned to death inside a federal lock-up nearly four years ago says he is still searching for answers as to why it took so long for Justice Department officials to charge his father.

Alex Geas, 28, received a letter from his father, Fotios "Freddy" Geas, on Aug. 14. Just three days later, Freddy was charged in connection with Bulger's death.

The news of Geas’ criminal charges was not necessarily shocking to his inner circle, Alex told Fox News Digital. But for more than a year the family and their attorney had publicly sought for the Department of Justice to either remove Freddy from solitary confinement or charge him, and now they’re questioning the reason behind the delay.

"I wouldn't say we're actively preparing, but this was always on the table to happen eventually. Our main reason of [speaking out] last year — if it's going to happen, it should happen now. It shouldn't happen in four, five, six, seven years."

Geas and his father’s lawyer, Daniel Kelly, spoke to Fox News Digital for a story in May 2021 in which they complained that Geas had been held in solitary confinement at West Virginia’s United States Penitentiary, Hazelton, since "almost immediately after" Bulger was fatally beaten on Oct. 30, 2018.

"I challenge the prison to either formally indict him or to transfer him, because this cannot keep going on like this," Alex Geas said last year.

Bulger was 89 when he was killed just hours after arriving at the federal lock-up, where he was housed in general population.

Prosecutors have accused Geas, 55, Paul J. DeCologero, 48, and Geas’ 36-year-old roommate, Sean McKinnon, of conspiracy to commit first-degree murder, among other allegations.

They’ve said Geas and DeCologero allegedly repeatedly struck Bulger in the head using "a belt with a lock attached to it." They were said to have entered Bulger’s jail cell around 6 a.m. on Oct. 30, 2018, and were inside for about seven minutes while McKinnon allegedly kept watch at a nearby table.

Bulger was discovered on his bed roughly two hours later.

Geas and DeCologero were also charged with aiding and abetting first-degree murder, murder by a federal prisoner serving a life sentence and assault resulting in serious bodily injury. McKinnon, 36, was also charged with make false statements to a federal agent.

Attorneys for DeCologero and McKinnon were not identified as of press time Friday. McKinnon's mother and Geas' attorney did not respond to Fox News Digitals' requests for comment.

Alex Geas would not comment when asked on Thursday if he had any idea ahead of time whether his father would be charged with Bulger’s death.

He said he learned the news "whenever everything happened" and "just thought ahead to the next move."

"When you talk to my dad, it’s always, he’s always in a good mindset. He’s always doing great given the circumstances. But it’s never a depressing conversation," Geas said. "Even the next time we talk, it will be the same conversation. It will be normal. We’ll make fun of his brother, my uncle, a little bit. … We’ll talk about the Patriots."

Freddy Geas was still housed in solitary confinement up to the day he was indictment this month and remained housed there as of the last time Alex had spoken with him, his son said.

But Alex Geas said there is "no reason that this should have taken four years."

"It’s not like they had to go and hunt ... the whole investigation happened in there, first of all. So, everyone they had to investigate or interview or whatever it is right there in the prison. And even if my dad was transferred out to Colorado or to wherever he would have gone, it's not like they don't know where he is."

But Steven Friedland, a former federal prosecutor for the District of Columbia, said investigating the crime was likely more complicated because of where it took place.

"In the Whitey Bulger situation, you have someone who was killed in prison, which makes it easier and more difficult at the same time," said the award-winning professor and founding faculty member at Elon University Law School.

"You know your group from which it might have arisen — the group of suspects — but proof is going to be difficult. And when I say difficult, I mean you'll have lots of ulterior motives if people talk about what happened and how it occurred," Friedland told Fox News Digital. "So, it's very easy for someone to say, 'Oh, yeah, so-and-so did it,' and blame it on someone they don't like. And that kind of evidence is going to be less reliable when it's used in a court of law."

After news of the charges, an attorney representing Bulger’s family theorized that the Justice Department delayed criminal action in the case to avoid releasing any details that could benefit the family’s wrongful death lawsuit against the federal government.

The lawsuit, filed in 2020, accused the BOP of failing to protect Bulger, who was a known "snitch" at the time. It was later dismissed. The attorney representing the family did not respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment.

But Friedland said prosecutors are used to working with criminal cases in which there are civil implications and are usually "not thinking about those other kinds of cases unless it will affect the prosecution."

He added that prosecutors were at one advantage in that the crimes were committed behind bars, therefore, the suspects were already in prison and investigators did not have to worry about tracking them down.

"I think the real issue here was probably – and we don't know, we're just speculating – but it probably, in part, was about the evidence. Did the prosecutor have reliable evidence that would say who did it and what were the circumstances?" Friedland went on. "They knew the circumstances because he was found, but he wasn't found until a couple hours later. So, that could lead to a lot of opportunity by many people."

Bulger, the ruthless leader who was at the helm of the South Boston-based Winter Hill Gang, was convicted in 2013 for his involvement in a slew of crimes, including 11 murders.

He was reported to have used a wheelchair around the time he was killed. Combination locks are available for commissary purchase at USP Hazelton for $6.50.

Prior to his move to West Virginia, the octogenarian was housed in facilities in Florida and Tucson, Arizona, the AP reported. Later on in his career, Bulger was also known, and some say hated, for being an FBI informant who ratted on the New England mob, his gang’s main rival, according to the AP.

Meanwhile, Geas was in the prison for his conviction in the 2003 murders of a Massachusetts crime boss and his associate, and for shooting a union head in New York, Masslive.com reported. Geas, who was convicted alongside his brother and a Genovese crime boss, was taken down with a help of a government informant — one of the trio’s former friends who had flipped, according to Kelly and the report. He was sentenced to two terms of life without parole, Kelly said.

After Bulger's death, some who knew Geas or were familiar with his case described him as having a distaste for informants.

"Freddy hated rats," Ted McDonough, a private investigator who knew Geas told the Boston Globe after the news of Bulger’s bludgeoning. "Freddy hated guys who abused women. Whitey was a rat who killed women. It’s probably that simple."

Prosecutors recently revealed that USP Hazelton inmates — including at least one of the three men charged in the mobster’s death — knew ahead of time about Bulger’s impending transfer to the facility.

Brian Kelly, one of the federal prosecutors who secured Bulger’s conviction, called Bulger a "psychotic killer" who carried out several of his murders himself.

"Whitey was accused of and convicted of running a sprawling criminal enterprise for almost two decades. And during those two decades, he was probably the most feared and dangerous, dangerous criminal in Boston. So, you know, everyone in Boston knew who he was," Kelly told Fox News Digital. "He was a hands-on killer. And that’s what made him so feared."

Kelly noted that not only that Bulger never should have been placed in general population but also that he shouldn’t have been transferred to a facility where so many Boston criminals were already incarcerated.

At trial, he said, the public not only got a glimpse into the horrid crimes committed at the hands of the mob boss but also heard on multiple occasions about how Bulger acted as an FBI informant.

"Certainly that would put a target on his back in the general prison system. So, until the very end, he was kept out of the general prison system for that very reason," Kelly, now a partner at Boston-based firm Nixon Peabody, told Fox News Digital on Thursday. "At a minimum, it was extremely poor judgment and probably just bureaucratic persona that led to him being put into a prison in West Virginia where there were Boston-based Mafia killers residing.

Upon learning the news of Bulger’s death, Kelly said Bulger had "victimized dozens of families," "and it;s not as though anyone is going to feel sorry for him."

"But at the same time, you know, the prison system is not supposed to, you know, tolerate that sort of attacks. And so, you know, it was curious, curious as to why he was put in general population," Kelly went on.

Much like Friedland, he said prosecutors often encounter difficulties investigating cases in prison settings, which could have led to the delay in charges.

"There’s not really, unfortunately, a sense of urgency because the perpetrators aren’t going anywhere," he said. "But I can’t really help them too much for taking their time to put a case together."

Asked if there was one moment he remembered in particular about his involvement in the Bulger prosecution, he said he thought of crying family members or the details of Bulger’s devastating crimes.

"Bulger himself in person was still a scary guy," he recalled. "He was one mean-looking guy when he was staring at me, and he was in his 80s. I can only imagine what he was like in his heyday."

The Justice Department did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital's request for comment.
https://www.foxnews.com/us/james-whitey ... ay-charges
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Re: Bulger killers formally charged

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Re: Bulger killers formally charged

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NBC NEWS
Whitey Bulger murder suspect says ‘everybody knew he was coming’ to their prison.

One of the men charged in the killing of James “Whitey” Bulger inside a West Virginia prison said in an exclusive jailhouse interview that all the inmates in his unit knew in advance that the notorious gangster was being moved there.

Bulger, 89, was found beaten to death less than 12 hours after he was placed in his cell at the USP Hazelton federal prison, one of the most violent penitentiaries in the country.

“Everybody knew he was coming,” Sean McKinnon told NBC News in a phone call from a Florida jail.

McKinnon, 36, is accused of acting as a lookout while two other inmates rushed into Bulger’s cell and beat him with a lock on the morning of Oct. 30, 2018.

At a detention hearing last month, prosecutors said McKinnon told his mother in a recorded phone call before Bulger was moved to the prison that the Boston mobster was set to arrive there, suggesting he had inside information that played a role in the killing.

McKinnon told NBC News that Bulger’s impending arrival at USP Hazelton was an open secret in his housing unit.

“I heard it from another inmate — not even one of the guys from Massachusetts,” he said. “It wasn’t like I got this secret news. I was just a little fish in the sea.”

The federal Bureau of Prisons has received sharp criticism for its decision to place Bulger in the general population of a penitentiary where two inmates had been killed in the previous six months. It remains unclear why an inmate like Bulger, an elderly, former FBI informant, was moved to a prison like USP Hazelton.

“What did they think was going to happen?” said Jack Donson, a retired Bureau of Prisons official who spent most of his 23 years at the agency screening inmates set to enter the federal prison in Otisville, New York. “There was a breakdown at every level.”

A spokesman for the Bureau of Prisons declined comment.

Prosecutors say two men, Fotios “Freddy” Geas, 55, and Paul J. DeCologero, 48, killed Bulger minutes after all the cell doors on their unit were unlocked ahead of breakfast.

Geas and DeCologero were both involved in organized crime in Massachusetts. Geas, a mafia hitman, was serving a life sentence for murder. DeCologero was serving a 25-year sentence after being convicted of racketeering and witness-tampering.

McKinnon was from New Hampshire and had no known affiliation with organized crime, according to local authorities. He was in prison for stealing guns from a firearms store and selling them in exchange for drugs, and he was locked up in the same cell as Geas.

Once the unit's doors opened at 6 a.m., DeCologero went into the cell shared by Geas and McKinnon, according to prosecutors. The three men walked out a few minutes later, with Geas and DeCologero heading straight into Bulger’s cell. It took them only seven minutes to murder the once-feared crime boss and leave his cell, prosecutors said.

During that time, McKinnon was sitting at a table that provided him a view of Bulger’s cell and the guard station, according to prosecutors.

In his interview with NBC News, McKinnon said he was in fact sitting among a group of other inmates watching television.

“There were 10 other guys there with me,” he said.

McKinnon professed his innocence and said he believes he’s been targeted in a “witch hunt.”

“I’m an innocent man caught up in the wrong stuff,” he said.

A spokeswoman for the U.S. attorney for the Northern District of West Virginia, which is handling the case, declined to comment.

Bulger was moved to the West Virginia penitentiary from a prison in central Florida known as a safe haven for government witnesses and others likely to be targeted by fellow inmates.

He was almost 90 years old with a history of heart problems and high blood pressure, and he needed a wheelchair to move around.

According to prison records, he was designated to be transferred after he threatened a nurse. But he only arrived at Hazelton USP after someone had inexplicably changed his medical classification to a level that indicated he was in relatively good health, the records show.

Bulger was wheeled into his cell after 8:30 p.m. on the night of Oct. 29. 2018. He was found dead the following morning at 8:07 a.m., prosecutors said.

Nearly four years after the killing, Geas, DeCologero and McKinnon were charged with conspiracy to commit first-degree murder.

Geas and DeCologero were hit with additional charges: aiding and abetting first-degree murder, and assault resulting in serious bodily injury. McKinnon was also charged with making false statements to a federal agent.

In the interview, McKinnon said FBI agents interviewed him twice in the following years. He said he had no information to provide to them.

“I don’t know nothing. I wasn’t part of nothing. I don’t know what they did that morning,” he said, referring to Geas and DeCologero.

McKinnon was out of prison, living and working in Florida when he was arrested in connection with Bulger’s murder.

He said he found out about the charges after he was tricked into showing up at the federal courthouse in Ocala.

Earlier in the day, his parole officer called him on the phone and said he needed to come in to fill out some paperwork. McKinnon said he was told he could finish his shift at work. But soon after he arrived at a federal courthouse, two U.S. marshals pulled him aside and handcuffed him.

“It was a heartbreak,” McKinnon said.

“I did stupid things when I was younger,” he added. “But I’ve been trying to make up for that by living as a productive person and now it’s been ripped away.”

He said his mother set up a GoFundMe account in the hope of raising enough money to hire a private attorney.

“These are the worst kind of charges — conspiracy,” McKinnon said. “It’s going to be the fight of my life.”
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Re: Bulger killers formally charged

Post by furiofromnaples »

What risk Geas and DeCologero? Death Prnalty or another life in a supermax?
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