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A federal judge cited the depravity of James Whitey Bulgers crimes and the lives he wrecked during his murderous reign in Bostons underworld as she sentenced him to two life sentences in prison plus five years.(10:30 a.m.)
A federal judge ruled that the families of all 19 people allegedly killed by James Whitey Bulger may speak at his sentencing hearing, even though a jury only determined that 11 of them were killed by Bulger during his long rampage through Bostons underworld.(11/13/13)
Lawyers for James 'Whitey' Bulger asked a judge to bar testimony at his November sentencing from relatives of his alleged murder victims whose deaths were not tied decisively to the gangster.
Notorious gangster James Whitey Bulgers taxpayer-funded defense team billed the court more than $2.6 million over the past two years and those costs will climb because they do not include lawyers fees and expenses from July and August while his federal racketeering trial was underway, according to court records.(9/13/13)
James Whitey Bulger, the notorious Boston gangster who rampaged through the citys underworld for decades, was convicted today in federal court of charges that will likely keep him in prison for the rest of his life.(8/12/13)
Gangster Whitey Bulger wont fight to keep $822,000 found stashed in the walls of his Calif. home, but he will keep a Stanley Cup ring he received as a gift, court documents said.(8/9/13)
The long-awaited trial of the notorious gangster drew attorneys, witnesses, and families of alleged Bulger victims to the John Joseph Moakley United States Courthouse.
An exhibit photo taken by the FBI showed stacks of money discovered in Whitey Bulger's apartment in California. See more of the evidence introduced at the trial.
Prosecutors, defense attorneys, and the judge held animated discussions about the James "Whitey" Bulger trial as jurors deliberated, but the parties have not said publicly what issue they are confronting in the trial of gangster and FBI informant.(8/7/13)
During closing arguments, a federal prosecutor said James "Whitey" Bulger was no Robin Hood, despite the myth that he kept drugs off the streets of South Boston.(8/5/13)
After days of speculation over whether he would take the stand, James "Whitey" Bulger told Judge Denise Casper he would not state his own case even though he wanted to, saying the trial was a "sham" and his defense was "choked off."(8/2/13)
Middlesex District Attorney Marian T. Ryan said that Stephen Stippo Rakes was allegedly murdered by a Sudbury man who "acted alone" with no connection to the James 'Whitey" Bulger trial. Rakes was told he would not testify in Bulger's trial the day before his death.(8/2/13)
A man pictured sitting next to the notorious gangster was identified as an ex-priest who was defrocked for allegedly sexually abusing boys.
US District Court Judge Denise J. Casper refused James "Whitey" Bulger's request to sequester jurors in his trial, saying from the bench that she was not inclined to inconvenience these jurors.(7/30/13)
Attorneys for James Whitey Bulger called retired FBI agent Robert Fitzpatrick, who tried in the early 1980s to stop his agency from using Bulger as an informant.(7/29/13)
Defense attorneys for Bulger filed a motion to sequester the jury when they begin deliberating whether he is guilty of the sweeping racketeering indictment he faces, including allegations he participated in 19 murders.(7/29/13)

US District Court Judge Denise J. Casper, 45, has had the ultimate task in tending to jurors, monitoring an angry defendant, and settling emotional lawyers while also entertaining their arguments over 25 days of testimony.(7/29/13)
Stephen Flemmi, a former partner of James Whitey Bulger, took a dig at Bulger's service as an FBI informant. After being asked if he liked being called a "rat," Flemmi said, "I don't think anyone likes it. I don't think Mr. Bulger likes it, either."(7/24/13)
James "Whitey" Bulger had a relationship with a teenage girl he once brought with him to Mexico, Stephen Flemmi testified as he fought off sharp questioning from the Bulger defense.(7/23/13)
The brother of one of James Whitey Bulgers alleged victims shouted out in rage that Bulgers partner, Stephen The Rifleman Flemmi, was lying about him on the witness stand. Flemmi apologized, saying he had mixed up Steve Davis with his brother, Mickey.(7/19/13)
The two former partners exchanged heated words after Flemmi testified that Bulger was an FBI informant and passed details to law enforcement "hundreds of times" during their shared criminal careers.(7/18/13)
Attorney Pam Wheeler said her father Roger Wheeler wanted to sell World Jai Alai because it was not performing as he had hoped. Wheeler was killed in 1981 after John Callahan, a Boston businessman and former president of the company, asked hitman John Martorano to kill Wheeler to end his probe into the company's finances.(7/17/13)
Robert Halloran told jurors his brother, Edward "Brian" Halloran, said he was going to be an informant for the FBI because he feared James "Whitey" Bulger. Halloran was killed in May 1982, four months after he began cooperating with authorities.(7/16/13)
Jerry Montanari, an FBI agent involved in opening an informant file for Brian Halloran, said Halloran feared for his life in the months before he was shot to death in South Boston because he had been cooperating with authorities.(7/16/13)
A convicted drug dealer from South Boston told a US District Court jury today that James "Whitey" Bulger ordered him to pay $100,000 in tribute in the 1980s, and he only agreed to pay the money to the gangster after his 17-year-old brother was shot.(7/12/13)
US District Court Judge Denise J. Casper today denied a request by James "Whitey" Bulger for a delay in his racketeering and murder trial, a delay defense attorneys said was needed because the 83-year-old gangster is "exhausted" by the fast pace of the trial.(7/11/13)
A forensic anthropologist with the state medical examiners office testified that investigators recovered the remains of three bodies from a secret grave in Dorchester where James "Whitey" Bulger allegedly buried three people he is accused of murdering.(7/10/13)
Kevin Weeks told a US District Court jury that he led investigators to the graves of three of Bulger's alleged victims in 2000, after he began cooperating with authorities.(7/9/13)
James Whitey Bulger could be heard imitating a machine gun on tapes of a jailhouse conversation during which he discussed the 1975 murder of Edward Connors, whom Bulger and Stephen Flemmi allegedly shot in a phone booth on Morrissey Boulevard.(7/2/13)
Disgraced former FBI agent John Morris admitted passing on information that allegedly led to two murders, and apologized to the family of Michael Donahue, killed in 1982, for his "indirect" role in the killing.(7/1/13)
John Morris, a former FBI supervisor, told a US District Court jury today that he panicked in 1995 when federal prosecutors arrested Stephen The Rifleman Flemmi, out of fear that the member of the Winter Hill Gang would expose the FBI agents own crimes.(6/28/13)
James Whitey Bulger glared at a disgraced former FBI official who was testifying against him and told him, Youre a [expletive] liar, a federal prosecutor said today at the notorious gangsters trial.(6/27/13)
A retired Miami cop and and an Oklahoma lab tech testified briefly in the "Whitey" Bulger trial.(6/26/13)
A former FBI agent who admitted taking payoffs from James "Whitey" Bulger is expected to be the next witness at Bulger's racketeering trial.(6/26/13)
Margaret King, widow of Tommy King, said Bulger told her that her husband was probably in Canada robbing banks, thats what he originally wanted to do. King was killed in 1975.(6/25/13)
James Whitey Bulger looked upset as jurors in his federal racketeering and murder trial were provided a detailed account of his role as FBI Informant 1544, a relationship that, according to prosecutors, lasted between the gangster and the nations top law enforcement agency for years.(6/24/13)
Former professional gambler Frank Capizzi was wounded in a North End attack on March 19, 1973 that killed Albert Plummer. He described the incident in testimony as prosecutors continued to outline the human toll of the gang James "Whitey" Bulger allegedly led.(6/21/13)
Diane Sussman de Tennen survived a barrage of gunfire on March 8, 1973, when she, her then-boyfriend Louis Lapiana, and their friend Michael Milano were driving through the North End. John Martorano claimed responsibility for the attack that killed Milano, paralyzed Lapiana, and left de Tennen with a bullet wound.(6/20/13)
After three days testifying against Whitey Bulger, admitted killer John V. Martorano said he cooperated with law enforcement to receive a light sentence and avoid the death penalty for murders he committed in Oklahoma and Florida.(6/19/13)
After 16 years on the run, Whitey Bulger is facing trial in Boston for his alleged crimes. Here's a look at some of the local places where Bulger made his mark.
Jurors in Bulgers long-anticipated trial are set today to hear testimony from James Katz and Richard OBrien, two Boston area bookmakers whom Bulger and his associates allegedly shook down and forced to pay tribute.(6/14/13)
Robert Long led the State Police operation at a garage on one of the side streets near the Boston Garden, where the agency observed Bulger, local Mafia leaders, and other gangland figures.(6/13/13)
Key people in Bulger's trial |
Court transcriptJames Whitey Bulger made millions of dollars in crime, including in the drug trade, during his decades-long rampage through the Boston underworld and paid off corrupt law enforcement officers, but he was not an FBI informant and the witnesses expected to detail his crimes are unreliable, Bulgers defense attorney said today in opening statements at the notorious gangsters much-anticipated trial.(6/12/13)
James Whitey Bulger should not be allowed to limit emotional testimony from relatives of his alleged victims when his racketeering trial begins next week.(5/28/13)
US District Court Judge Denise J. Casper ruled that the notorious South Boston gangster cannot claim during his trial that federal law enforcement officials immunized him from prosecution.(5/2/13)

Globe writers Kevin Cullen and Shelley Murphy, who recently penned a book on reputed South Boston gangster James "Whitey" Bulger, recently chatted with Boston.com readers.

US District Court Judge Denise Casper says she will not let her late arrival in the case push the long-awaited trial beyond its previously scheduled start date.(3/26/13)
US District Court Judge Richard Stearns, who was a federal prosecutor when James "Whitey" Bulger was accused of serving as an FBI informant, was tossed off the case.(3/14/13)
James "Whitey" Bulger was quietly examined this month for an irregular heartbeat, raising questions about whether health problems will keep him from his long-anticipated trial.(2/21/13)
US District Judge Richard Stearns has given the attorneys for notorious gangster James Whitey Bulger extra time to file paperwork defending Bulgers claim that he was authorized by federal law enforcement officials to commit crimes in return for working as an informant.(Globe, 1/2/13)
The defense attorney for James Whitey Bulger stated in court papers filed Thursday night that federal prosecutors are wasting time by handing over multiple copies of the same documents in the 360,000 pages of evidence that Bulgers defense team has received.(Globe, 9/7/12)
Prosecutors released evidence in the Catherine Greig case, including the couple's utility bills for their apartment, fake IDs, and a small arsenal of guns.(Globe, 6/15/12)
Catherine Greig will not appeal her conviction for helping Bulger evade capture for more than 16 years, but is thinking about whether she wants to challenge her eight-year prison sentence.(Globe, 6/14/12)
In an unsealed letter, Margeret McCusker said her sister "never possessed an evil bone in her body" and wasn't involved in "Whitey" Bulger's crimes.(Globe, 6/13/12)
Catherine Greig, the girlfriend who spent years on the run with notorious Boston gangster James Whitey Bulger, was sentenced today to eight years in prison by a federal judge who said that Greig had aided someone accused of the most serious crimes imaginable to evade capture by law enforcement.(Globe, 6/12/12)
When James "Whitey" Bulger grew from small crimes to bank robbery, he gave up his accomplices, which may be how he learned to use the FBI.(Globe, 5/30/12)
The court won't hear an appeal over whether the family of a man allegedly killed by "Whitey" Bulger should get millions of dollars from the government.
James "Whitey" Bulger may have written two memoirs, one of which was titled "My Life in the Irish Mafia Wars," according to new court documents.(Boston Globe, 3/13/12)
A lawyer for the US Department of Justice argued against damages already awarded to the families of Whitey Bulger’s victims, saying there’s no cause and effect linking the government’s corrupt informant to these particular murders.(Boston Globe, 10/6/11)
James "Whitey" Bulger's girlfriend pleaded not guilty to a federal charge today. Her attorney said she will not cooperate with authorities.(Boston Globe, 8/18/11)
James “Whitey’’ Bulger and his companion, Catherine Greig, used at least 15 aliases, including one embossed on an AARP card, during their 16 years on the lam, federal authorities said.(Boston Globe)
James “Whitey’’ Bulger pleaded not guilty to a federal racketeering indictment charging him with the murders of 19 people, speaking softly during a packed hearing that offered a glimpse of how the case against Boston’s most infamous gangster might unfold.(Boston Globe)
The Bulger brothers — politician William and gangster Whitey — cast long shadows for years in realms that sometimes intersected, veterans of the era recall.(Boston Globe)
What might seem like a slam-dunk case against James “Whitey’’ Bulger will be an immensely complex undertaking, costing taxpayers millions and playing out over years, former prosecutors and defense attorneys say.(Boston Globe)
A federal judge granted a request by prosecutors yesterday to dismiss racketeering charges brought against James “Whitey’’ Bulger in 1995, saying it was “very much in the public interest’’ that the 81-year-old stand trial in a later case charging him with 19 murders.(Boston Globe)
Two prominent Boston lawyers are poised to team up on one of Boston’s most sensational criminal cases, representing reputed mobster James “Whitey’’ Bulger against accusations that he is responsible for 19 murders.(Boston Globe)
James “Whitey’’ Bulger returned to Boston in disguise and “armed to the teeth’’ several times during his 16 years on the run because he had “to take care of some unfinished business,’’ prosecutors said in court documents yesterday.(Boston Globe)
From the gritty South Boston housing development where James “Whitey’’ Bulger grew up to the grassy stretches of Castle Island, people said that they expect the former crime boss to implicate more federal agents for corruption in the handling of his case.(Boston Globe)
A chatty James “Whitey’’ Bulger provided FBI agents with intriguing details about his life on the run after his arrest last week, boasting that he routinely slipped into Mexico to buy medicine for a heart condition, according to a law enforcement official.(Boston Globe)
They were the gray-haired couple who blended in, yet often surprised people with acts of almost excessive kindness. On Wednesday, neighbors in the Princess Eugenia apartment building where the couple lived learned who they really were.(Boston Globe)
Some worry that the truth about James "Whitey" Bulger's crimes will be concealed while the case is controlled by the federal government.(Boston Globe)
Brian McGrory
In James “Whitey’’ Bulger’s capture, there is finally justice for all.(Boston Globe)
After 16 years on the run, fugitive mobster James "Whitey" Bulger was arrested yesterday at a house in Santa Monica, Calif. with more than 20 guns and a small fortune in cash, police said.(Globe, 6/23/11)
Fugitive gangster James Whitey Bulger had hundreds of thousands of dollars at his disposal but he lived in a rent-controlled apartment since at least 1999, according to the building manager and city records.(Globe, 6/23/11)
KEVIN CULLEN
Tommy Donahue was awakened by a call telling him the man alleged to have killed his father Michael 30 years ago was finally captured.(Globe, 6/23/11)
Scot Lehigh
Lehigh discusses how the search for a fugitive has ended, but it also opens a whole new chapter in the search for truth.(Globe, 6/23/11)
William M. Bulger reached the top of the Massachusetts Senate and the University of Massachusetts system because of his own smarts, connections, and innate understanding of politics.Nonetheless, there has always been an aura around him rooted in his close relationship with his gangster brother, James Whitey Bulger.(Globe, 6/23/11)
The Boston task force searching for "Whitey" Bulger has embarked on a new strategy: using daytime television to find Bulger's longtime companion, Catherine Greig.(Boston Globe, 6/21/11)
The never-told story of the gangster and his little son
Fifteen years after he fled town for good, you’d think there’d be nothing new to say about Boston’s most-chronicled serial killer. Oh, but it seems there is.(Boston Globe, 1/23/10)

From the archives
The FBI says its worldwide manhunt got a boost last year from an appeal to plastic surgeons and dentists to be on the lookout for the elderly gangster and his girlfriend.(Boston Globe, 1/5/11)
For the first time, the US Marshals Service has joined the international manhunt for Bulger.(Boston Globe, 10/7/10)
A federal judge found that the Justice Department tried to humiliate and embarrass the families of two women who were murdered.(Boston Globe, 9/25/10)
The FBI hopes that James Whitey Bulger's girlfriend, Catherine Greig, might have felt the need for a little makeover.(Boston Globe, 5/13/10)
Ending a chapter in Boston history that has cast a shadow on the FBI for more than a decade, a Florida jury convicted retired agent John J. Connolly Jr. (right) of second-degree murder for plotting with informants "Whitey" Bulger and Stephen "The Rifleman" Flemmi to kill a potential witness.(Boston Globe, 11/7/08)
As fugitive gangster James "Whitey" Bulger marked his 79th birthday, the FBI increased the reward for information leading directly to Bulger's capture from $1 million to $2 million.(Boston Globe, 9/4/08)
He was one of the most notorious hitmen in Boston mob history. He became the first in a rogues gallery of underworld figures to turn government witness against gangsters James "Whitey" Bulger and Stephen "The Rifleman" Flemmi and their corrupt FBI handlers.(Globe Staff, 3/20/07)
Kevin Weeks said his book about James ''Whitey" Bulger helped him close the chapter on living in the gangster's shadow for 25 years.(Boston Globe, 3/13/06)
Tim Connors was only a baby when his father, Eddie, was snatched from him by gangsters Stephen Flemmi and James "Whitey" Bulger, gunned down on June 12, 1975, as he stood defenseless inside a Dorchester telephone booth, prosecutors say.(Globe Staff, 1/28/04)