Family of mobster slain at Hazleton files $200 million lawsuit

BRUCETON MILLS, W.Va. – The Family of Whitey Bulger has filed a $200 million dollar wrongful death lawsuit against the federal government. The eighty-nine-year-old convicted mobster was beaten to death in his wheelchair hours after being transferred to the United States Penitentiary, Hazleton from the Federal Transfer Center, Oklahoma City.

Bulger was convicted of 31 of 32 federal racketeering charges, including 11 murders, in 2013 and sentenced to two life terms plus five years.

In September of 2014, Bulger was sent to the Coleman II United States Penitentiary in Sumterville, Florida. On October 29, 2018 he was transferred to Hazelton, 11 hours later he was found beaten to death.

The primary suspect in the killing was mafia hit man Freddy Geas, he has never disputed his role in the killing.

“We believe that James Bulger was deliberately placed in harm’s way,” the Bulger family said in a statement to the Wall Street Journal. “There is simply no other explanation for the transfer of someone in his condition and inmate status to be placed in the general population of one of the country’s most violent federal penitentiaries.”

At the time of his death Boston Globe investigative reporter Shelly Murphy said“It’s very strange that he was sent to that prison. We know there were people at that prison, not just the guy now suspected in the murder, but others that have Boston ties there,” she said. “It’s just a little strange they would put Whitey in a place with known adversaries.”

Bulger was the third inmate killed within seven months.

The family also says that because of all the civil judgments and restitution orders against Bulger they would never benefit from a court decision in their favor.