Whitey Bulger murder suspect says fellow inmates knew mobster was coming to West Virginia prison
By Jon Levine
September 10, 2022
Sean McKinnon, a man indicted for the prison death of James Bulger, says that he is innocent.
A man accused of participating in the prison murder of James “Whitey” Bulger said it was no secret the octogenarian crime boss would be showing up there.
“Everybody knew he was coming,” Sean McKinnon said in a jailhouse interview with NBC News.
The Boston gangster was found dead in the maximum security USP Hazelton federal prison on Oct. 30, 2018, just hours after he was transferred to the West Virginia lockup.
Bulger had been transferred to the facility after threatening a nurse at his previous jail in Florida.
The wheelchair-bound mobster, James Bulger, had heart troubles and high blood pressure before being beaten to death.
The 89-year-old, wheelchair-bound mobster with heart troubles and high blood pressure was “badly beaten” by more than one inmate soon after his arrival.
Fotios “Freddy” Geas, 55, and Paul J. DeCologero, 48 — both of whom have links to organized crime — killed Bulger, while McKinnon acted as a lookout, prosecutors say.
2 comments:
The Feebs didn't want him to talk about the dirty deeds he did for them, and was allowed to do by them.
You want to know who knows what in a penitentiary? Ask the Row Boss, Building Tender or Night Fire Watch Trustee.
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