The Hartford
Courant
Former FBI Agent
Indicted In Mob Case
By EDMUND MAHONY
December 23, 1999
BOSTON - One of the FBI's former
top organized-crime investigators was arrested Wednesday on charges of conspiring to
arrange payoffs from two notorious gangsters while protecting them from arrest and helping
them extort real estate from a young South Boston couple.
In a lengthy racketeering indictment, retired FBI
Special Agent John Connolly in effect was charged with going to work for James
"Whitey" Bulger and Steven "The Rifleman" Flemmi - two informants he
was supposed to be handling for the FBI's Boston division.
Connolly, who was arrested in his Lynnfield,
Mass., home, pleaded innocent in federal court to the five- count indictment and was set
free on $200,000 bail. Flemmi, currently jailed on related charges, and Bulger, a
fugitive, were also charged in the indictment unsealed Wednesday afternoon.
Barry Mawn, special agent in charge of the FBI's
Boston office, apologized for what he said was Connolly's violation of the public trust.
"I am certainly on the one hand saddened, but on the other I'm angered," Mawn
said.
But Connolly's lawyer, Robert Hopedale, said the
indictment was flimsy and an embarrassment to the FBI and the Justice Department.
"I'm telling you, we'll take it apart," he said.
He said Connolly was being blamed because he
participated in FBI-sanctioned dealing with mobsters that the agency now regrets.
"The government now seeks a scapegoat and
have decided that John Connolly is the best person to play that role," he said.
Connelly retired in 1990 and now works as director
of security for Boston Edison.
For decades, Bulger and Flemmi have been legendary
figures in New England crime, imposing their Winter Hill gang's stranglehold on the South
Boston rackets. Since the late 1990s, though, the FBI has conceded under court order that
the two were at the same time the Boston division's two most productive confidential
informants, delivering the evidence the bureau needed to lock up top members of the
Italian mafia.
But other law enforcement agencies have long
complained that Bulger and Flemmi had an uncanny ability to learn in advance of any
criminal investigations directed at them. Detectives with various New England state police
agencies believed the two were using a small number of agents in the Boston FBI office to
eliminate their competition for the area rackets and win protection from prosecution from
other agencies.
Among the crimes Bulger and Flemmi have long been
suspected of - but repeatedly able to distance themselves from - is the 1981 murder of
former World Jai Alai owner Roger Wheeler. After Wheeler's murder on an exclusive Tulsa,
Okla., golf course, two men believed to have had evidence about the crime were violently
killed themselves.
The indictment unsealed Wednesday, based on work
by a special federal investigative strike force, seems to support the longstanding view
that Bulger and Flemmi had an unusually close relationship with the FBI. Connolly and the
two, one time informants are named in a five-count indictment accusing them of
racketeering, racketeering conspiracy, obstruction of justice and conspiracy to obstruct
justice. Flemmi is accused alone in the fifth count of obstruction for passing classified
information from Connolly to Patriarca crime boss Francis "Cadillac Frank"
Salemme.
The indictment of Connolly, a highly regarded,
retired FBI agent, is an extraordinary event. It could not be immediately determined late
Wednesday whether a retired FBI agent has ever been linked to criminal activity he was
formerly assigned to investigate. Connolly has repeatedly insisted that he has done
nothing wrong.
Connolly was an FBI agent from 1968 until January
1990. Midway through his career he returned from New York to his hometown of Boston where,
as a youngster, he had grown up with and befriended Bulger. Once back home as an FBI
agent, Connolly became a highly regarded member of the Boston division's organized crime
squad. Monday's indictment puts him right in the middle of the people he was once assigned
to investigate.
Specifically, the indictment unsealed Wednesday
charges:
During the 1980s, Connolly helped Bulger and
Flemmi pay $7,000 in cash in three payments, as well as two cases of expensive wine, to
former Boston FBI supervisor John Morris. Morris was Connolly's boss on the organized
crime squad.
Morris admitted taking the money and wine while
testifying under a grant of immunity in 1998 as a witness in a related case in a Boston
federal court.
Evidence was presented at that hearing that Bulger
and Flemmi had an odd social relationship with a variety of federal agents, sometimes
dining and exchanging gifts with them. Morris is no longer with the FBI.
Connolly and the two informants also are
collectively accused of conspiracy and extortion in the illegal takeover of a South Boston
liquor store. There was evidence at the related federal hearing that Bulger and Flemmi
extorted Stippo's Liquor Mart from a young couple in 1984. In the Stippo's case, Connolly
is also accused of conspiring to prevent other FBI agents from investigating the
extortion.
Connolly also is accused of tipping Bulger and
Flemmi to law enforcement investigations of which they were targets. In 1988, according to
the indictment, Connolly told them an associate named Baharoian was the subject of an FBI
wiretap in Roxbury. He is accused of telling the two in December 1994 that they and others
were about to be indicted for racketeering. Flemmi is accused of immediately passing that
information along to Salemme. The predicted indictment was in fact returned on Jan 10,
1995.
As a result of the tip, Bulger and Salemme became
fugitives. Salemme was apprehended in Florida in August 1995. Bulger remains at large.
Flemmi was arrested before he could flee from the
1995 indictment. While sitting in jail for months awaiting trial, he decided to mount a
defense claiming that he should be cleared off all charges because whatever he was accused
of doing, he did while working for the FBI as an informant.
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