The Peterborough Examiner

Whitey Bulger, Boston gangster, found dead in prison at 89

- DENISE LAVOIE

BOSTON — James (Whitey) Bulger, the murderous Boston gangster who benefited from a corrupt relationsh­ip with the FBI before spending 16 years as one of America’s most wanted men, died in federal prison. He was 89.

Bulger was found unresponsi­ve Tuesday morning at the U.S. penitentia­ry in West Virginia where he’d just been transferre­d, and a medical examiner declared him dead shortly afterward, according to the Federal Bureau of Prisons. Authoritie­s did not immediatel­y release a cause of death but said the FBI was notified and is investigat­ing.

Bulger, the model for Jack Nicholson’s ruthless crime boss in the 2006 Martin Scorsese movie, “The Departed,” led a largely Irish mob that ran loansharki­ng, gambling and drug rackets. He also was an FBI informant who ratted on the New England mob, his gang’s main rival, in an era when bringing down the Mafia was a top national priority for the FBI.

Bulger fled Boston in late 1994 after his FBI handler, John Connolly Jr., warned him he was about to be indicted. With a $2 million reward on his head, Bulger became one of the FBI’s “Ten Most Wanted” criminals, with a place just below Osama bin Laden. When the extent of his crimes and the FBI’s role in overlookin­g them became public in the late 1990s, Bulger became a source of embarrassm­ent for the FBI. During the years he was a fugitive, the FBI battled a public perception that it had not tried very hard to find him.

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