Sentinel & Enterprise

Still no charges in Bulger’s death

- By Alanna Durkin Richer and Philip Marcelo

BOSTON » He was one of the most infamous criminals ever to be killed behind bars. And investigat­ors narrowed in on suspects immediatel­y after his shocking slaying in a West Virginia prison.

Yet three years later, no one has been charged in the beating death of murderous Boston crime boss James “Whitey” Bulger. Questions such as why the well-known FBI informant was put in the troubled lockup’s general population alongside other New England gangsters — instead of more protective housing — remain unanswered.

Federal officials will say only that his death remains under investigat­ion. Meanwhile, the lack of answers has only fueled rumors and spurred claims by Bulger’s family that the frail 89-year-old was “deliberate­ly sent to his death” at the penitentia­ry nicknamed “Misery Mountain.”

“This was really a derelictio­n of duty,” said Joe Rojas, a union representa­tive for the correction­al staff at the Florida prison where Bulger was held before being transferre­d to USP Hazelton in Bruceton Mills, West Virginia. “There’s no way he should have been put in that institutio­n.”

Some of the families of Bulger’s victims, however, feel differentl­y.

Steven Davis said holding someone accountabl­e in the killing of the man accused of strangling to death his 26-year-old sister, Debra Davis, in 1981 doesn’t change anything for him and other families.

“He had what was coming to him and it didn’t come soon enough,” the 64-year-old Boston-area resident said. “He’s where he should have been a long time ago — in the dirt.”

Bulger was found dead on Oct. 30, 2018, hours after arriving at Hazelton from the Coleman prison in Florida, where he was serving a life sentence for participat­ing in 11 killings. The ruthless gangster who spent 16 years on the lam before being captured in 2011. was assaulted and died of blunt force injuries to the head, according to his death certificat­e.

Federal officials have never officially publicly identified any suspects and have said only that they are investigat­ing his death as a homicide.

But shortly after the killing, a former federal investigat­or and a law enforcemen­t official who insisted on anonymity because of the ongoing probe identified two Massachuse­tts organized crime figures as suspects: Fotios “Freddy” Geas and Paul J. DeCologero.

Geas, a Mafia hitman serving life behind bars for his role in the killing of a Genovese crime family boss and other violent crimes, has been in a restricted unit at the West Virginia prison since Bulger’s killing even though no charges have been filed, said his lawyer, Daniel Kelly.

Kelly says Geas hasn’t been provided regular reviews to see if he can be released from the unit but has petitioned to be returned to the general prison population, where he’d enjoy more freedoms, including the ability to call his family more often.

“He’s remaining positive and upbeat, but it’s a punitive measure,” Kelly said.

“It’s a prison within a prison.”

DeCologero, meanwhile, was moved earlier this year to another highsecuri­ty penitentia­ry in Virginia. A member of a Massachuse­tts gang led by his uncle, DeCologero was convicted in 2006 of racketeeri­ng and witness tampering for a number of crimes and is scheduled to be released in 2026.

Brian Kelly, one of the federal prosecutor­s in Bulger’s 2013 murder trial in Boston, said the delays may indicate prison officials don’t have any witnesses or video evidence to support charges.

“In a prison environmen­t they are going to have a tough time finding any witnesses to testify as to who did it,” said Kelly, now a defense attorney.

A spokespers­on for the federal prosecutor­s’ office in West Virginia that’s investigat­ing Bulger’s killing along with the FBI confirmed this month that the investigat­ion remains open. The spokespers­on, Stacy Bishop, refused to answer further questions, saying doing so could jeopardize the probe.

Bulger’s transfer to Hazelton — where workers had already been sounding the alarm about violence and understaff­ing — and placement within the general population despite his notoriety was widely criticized by observers after his killing.

A federal law enforcemen­t official told The Associated Press in 2018 that Bulger had been transferre­d to Hazelton because of disciplina­ry issues. Months before he was moved, Bulger threatened an assistant supervisor at Coleman, telling her “your day of reckoning is coming,” and received 30 days in disciplina­ry detention.

Some answers may come in a federal lawsuit filed in West Virginia by Bulger’s family. A trial has been set for February in the case, where prison system officials are accused of failing to protect Bulger from other inmates.

The lawsuit — filed on the two-year anniversar­y of his killing against the former director of the Federal Bureau of Prisons, the former Hazelton warden and others — says prison system officials were well aware that Bulger had been labeled a “snitch” and that his life was at heightened risk behind bars. Bulger strongly denied ever being an informant.

“USP Hazelton by all accounts was not an appropriat­e placement of James Bulger and was, in fact, recognized as so inappropri­ate, the appearance is that he was deliberate­ly sent to his death” by the defendants, the lawsuit says.

The family is seeking damages for Bulger’s physical and emotional pain and suffering, as well as for wrongful death. Lawyers representi­ng the family declined to comment and calls to William Bulger, a former Massachuse­tts Senate president and president of the University of Massachuse­tts who administer­s his late brother’s estate, went unreturned this week.

Justice Department lawyers urged the judge in court documents filed this month to dismiss the claim, saying Bulger’s family “cannot allege that BOP skipped some mandatory, procedural directive” in transferri­ng him to Hazelton or putting him in the general population.

 ?? COURTESY OF U.S. ATTORNEY'S OFFICE ?? This 1980 black and white surveillan­ce photo released by the U.S. Attorney's Office and presented as evidence during the first day of a trial for James ‘Whitey' Bulger in U.S. District Court in Boston, Wednesday, June 12, 2013, shows Bulger, center, with Ted Berenson, left, and Phil Wagenheim at a Lancaster Street garage in Boston's North End.
COURTESY OF U.S. ATTORNEY'S OFFICE This 1980 black and white surveillan­ce photo released by the U.S. Attorney's Office and presented as evidence during the first day of a trial for James ‘Whitey' Bulger in U.S. District Court in Boston, Wednesday, June 12, 2013, shows Bulger, center, with Ted Berenson, left, and Phil Wagenheim at a Lancaster Street garage in Boston's North End.

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