Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Mobster-informant Whitey Bulger, who inspired movies, dies

- The New York Times letters@hindustant­imes.com

James “Whitey” Bulger, the South Boston mobster and FBI informer who was captured after 16 years on the run and finally brought to justice in 2013 for a murderous reign of terror that inspired books, films and a saga of Irish-American brotherhoo­d and brutality, was found beaten to death Tuesday in a West Virginia prison. He was 89.

Two Federal Bureau of Prisons employees, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because the informatio­n was not yet public, said that Bulger was beaten unrecogniz­able by inmates shortly after he had arrived at the prison, the Hazelton federal penitentia­ry in Bruceton Mills.

He had been moved from prison to prison in recent years and was incarcerat­ed in Florida before being transferre­d to Hazelton, which has been rife with violence.

One of the workers said that the inmates were thought to be “affiliated with the mob.” A law enforcemen­t official who oversees organized crime cases said he was told by a federal law enforcemen­t official that a mob figure was believed to be responsibl­e for the killing.

Bulger, who was serving two life sentences for 11 murders, was found unresponsi­ve and pronounced dead by the Preston County Medical Examiner, the Federal Bureau of Prisons said in a statement. It did not indicate a cause of death.

To the families of those he executed gangland-style and to a neighborho­od held in thrall long after he vanished, in 1994, Bulger’s arrest in Santa Monica, California, in 2011 and his conviction of gruesome crimes brought a final reckoning of sorts, and an end to the career of one of America’s most notorious underworld figures.

 ?? AFP ?? James ‘Whitey’ Bulger
AFP James ‘Whitey’ Bulger

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