The Next Level Show - 9th December, 2009
Hot Facts For
A Cold Case
http://joanwebstermurder.yolasite.com
LISTEN:
Broadband Mp3 Audio

http://BreakForNews.com/audio/Beautiful ... 09-dsl.mp3
Click to Play or Right-Click to 'Save As' and Download.
Dialup Mp3 Audio

http://BreakForNews.com/audio/Beautiful ... dialup.mp3
Click to Play or Right-Click to 'Save As' and Download.
Interview Jan 2008:
The Next Level Show - 9th January, 2008
Murders & Mobsters:
My CIA Marriage
"I discovered troubling documents written by my children alleging
abuse by their father. I sought help and understanding. I was vilified,
devalued, and smeared, almost to the point of suicide. The very system
that declares speaking out about abuse was part of the system that
further abused a mother trying to help her children.."
- Eve Carson
"The case has tentacles that have led me to investigate the corruption,
organized crime, police brutality, and drug trafficking in Boston. The final
factor is the professional background in the CIA of in-laws that I tried to
relate to as family. I am speaking out and blowing a big whistle."
- Eve Carson
Eve Carson, criminal justice campaigner speaks to Fintan Dunne
about her marriage into the CIA-agent Webster family; about her
murderd sister-in-law; about mobsters and CIA operations; and
about her abuse concerns over her daughter's childhood.
LISTEN:
Broadband Mp3 Audio

http://BreakForNews.com/audio/BeautifulTruth090115a.mp3
Click to Play or Right-Click to 'Save As' and Download.
Dialup Mp3 Audio

http://BreakForNews.com/audio/BeautifulTruth090115.mp3
Click to Play or Right-Click to 'Save As' and Download.
Just breaking today:REFERENCES
Ex-FBI agent sentenced to
40 years in 1982 killing
By CURT ANDERSON – 8 hours ago
MIAMI (AP) — Former FBI agent John Connolly was
sentenced Thursday to 40 years in prison
for slipping information to Boston mobsters
that led to the 1982 shooting death of a
Miami gambling executive.....
Connolly, 68, showed no emotion when the sentence
was announced. Under laws in effect when the killing happened
in 1982, Connolly may only serve about a third of the 40 years,
prosecutors said.
Connolly is already serving a 10-year federal prison sentence for his
corrupt dealings with Boston's Winter Hill Gang. Blake said the state
murder sentence will run consecutively to the federal term, which is set
to end in 2011.
Callahan was fatally shot July 31, 1982, by mob hit man John Martorano,
who has admitted the killing. Callahan's body was stuffed into the trunk of
his Cadillac and discovered a few days later at a Miami International
Airport parking lot.
Martorano and other Winter Hill figures testified that Connolly
regularly tipped them off to potential "rats" or snitches within their own
ranks, sometimes leading to their untimely demise. In Callahan's case,
Connolly supposedly said the former World Jai-Alai president would
probably implicate the mobsters in the 1981 murder of an Oklahoma
businessman who owned the gambling business.
In return for his tips, prosecutors said Connolly was given inside
information by Winter Hill chieftains James "Whitey" Bulger and Stephen
"The Rifleman" Flemmi that led to high-profile FBI takedowns of bosses in
Boston's rival Italian-American Mafia. That made Connolly a highly
decorated FBI star.
Blake said Thursday that Connolly had "tarnished the badge" through his
corrupt dealings with mobsters.
"You left law enforcement. You forfeited that badge that so many people
wear proudly," Blake said. "For an FBI agent to go to the dark side is a
sad, sad day."
The statute of limitations issued focused on the use of a gun in Callahan's
slaying, which provides for an enhanced penalty and thus no time limit on
prosecution. Prosecutors argued it wasn't necessary for Connolly to
possess the actual murder weapon for the gun enhancement to apply,
while defense lawyers said it was an essential element — and Blake
concluded Connolly was correct.
But the judge said Connolly's attorneys didn't file their motion on the
issue until Dec. 2, well past the deadline of 10 days after the Nov. 6 jury
verdict. Blake decided he had no jurisdiction because of that technicality
and said he would welcome an appeals court review.
"I made my rulings on what I thought the law required. Anything the state
or defense wants to file, they are free to file," Blake said.
Connolly's defense focused on the difficult job of investigating organized
crime, on how FBI agents are forced to deal with unsavory characters to
win larger victories. Connolly did not testify at his trial but insisted at a
subsequent hearing that he had nothing to do with the Callahan killing.
"I never have, and I never would, knowingly say anything that would
cause harm to come to any human being," Connolly said Dec. 4.
While Flemmi and other Boston gangsters have admitted their roles in
many murders and other crimes, Bulger remains a fugitive on the FBI's
Ten Most Wanted list. Testimony indicated that he disappeared following a
1995 tip from then-retired Connolly that a grand jury was about to indict
him on racketeering charges.
The Winter Hill saga was the loose basis for the 2006 Martin Scorsese film
"The Departed," with Matt Damon in the crooked cop role and Jack
Nicholson playing a Bulger-like Irish-American gangster.
http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/art ... gD95NMCA80
James Joseph "Whitey" Bulger, Jr. (born September 3, 1929)
is a wanted fugitive and alleged leader of the Winter Hill Gang, an
Irish-American crime family operating in the region of Boston,
Massachusetts. He is the brother of William Michael Bulger (who
rose to become President of the Massachusetts State Senate and
President of the University of Massachusetts).
On August 19, 1999, Bulger became the 458th Ten Most Wanted fugitive
listed by the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI). He is currently wanted
for racketeering (under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt
Organizations Act (RICO), murder, conspiracy to commit murder,
extortion, conspiracy to commit extortion, money laundering, conspiracy
to commit money laundering and narcotics distribution. In October 2007,
Interpol released a "red notice" for Bulger.
In 1979, Howie Winter was arrested along with many members of his inner circle on charges of fixing horse races. Bulger, who was left out of the indictments, stepped into the vacuum and took over the leadership of the gang. He transferred its headquarters to the Lancaster Street Garage in Boston near the Boston Garden in the city's North End. As of early 2008, this historic garage is up for sale.
While Howie Winter and most of his organization's leadership were sentenced for fixing horse races in 1979, the FBI persuaded federal prosecutors to drop all charges against Bulger and Flemmi. Bulger and Flemmi then took over the remnants of the Winter Hill Gang and used their status as informants to eliminate competition.
The information they supplied to the FBI in subsequent years was responsible for the imprisonment of several Bulger associates whom Bulger viewed as a threat. But the main victim of their relationship with the federal government was the Italian-American Patriarca crime family, which was based in the North End, Boston and in Federal Hill, Providence. After the 1986 RICO indictment of Underboss Gennaro Angiulo and his associates, the Patriarca Family's Boston operations were in shambles. Bulger and Flemmi stepped into the ensuing vacuum to take control of illicit gambling and drug trafficking in and around Boston.[3]
By 1988, Bulger headed an organization that ran all of the rackets (e.g. extortion, loansharking, bookmaking, truck hijackings and arms trafficking) not just in Boston but throughout New England. They were also the main narcotics distributor in the state, receiving their drugs from a Cuban-American gang based in South Florida. They were earning so much money that they set up "The X Fund," which was used for payoffs of individuals in politics and law enforcement. It has since been revealed that members of the Boston Police Department, the Massachusetts State Police and the Federal Bureau of Investigation accepted bribes from the X fund.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Whitey_Bulger
John Connolly grew up in the South Boston housing projects a few doors down from the Bulger family. He formed a fast friendship with Billy Bulger, and admired Billy's mysterious and mischievious older brother, "Whitey." By the mid-1970s, Connolly was an up-and-coming FBI agent eager to make his mark in the agency's Boston office. Bulger, meanwhile, was climbing the ranks of the city's underworld and looking to expand his power. In 1975, the old Southie acquaintances formed a partnership from which both would benefit.
Connolly persuaded Bulger to sign on as an informant, a coup that soon made Connolly a star within the FBI. The agency valued high-level snitches, and in the Boston office there were none more highly placed than "Whitey" Bulger. Working on tips from Bulger and his partner, Stephen Flemmi, the FBI began dismantling the Irish mob's chief rivals, the Italian Mafia, paving the way for Bulger's ascendancy.
In exchange for the valuable tips Bulger provided, Connolly and his fellow agents allegedly helped the gangster elude the law by tipping him off to sting operations and cutting deals to save him from prosecution. Under this cloak of protection, Flemmi and Bulger built a blood-stained drug and racketeering empire.
Connolly retired from the FBI in 1990, accepting a highly paid job with Boston Edison and eventually retiring in 1991. With Connolly out of the picture, the FBI dropped Bulger and Flemmi as informants and began targeting them, eventually handing down federal racketeering and extortion charges against the pair in 1995.
The dark details of the FBI's secret pact with the Mob emerged in 1998, during a year-long series of federal court hearings into Flemmi's request to dismiss racketeering charges against him. The following year, a federal indictment charged Connolly with alerting Bulger and Flemmi to investigations, falsifying reports to hide their crimes, accepting bribes, and funneling payoffs to his former supervisor, John Morris. A second indictment handed down in 2000 charged the former FBI star with leaking information to Bulger and Flemmi that led to three slayings.
http://www.boston.com/news/packages/whi ... nnolly.htm
John J. "Zip" Connolly Jr. is a former FBI agent, currently
incarcerated in a federal penitentiary for racketeering and obstruction
of justice convictions stemming from his relationship with Whitey Bulger,
Steve Flemmi, and the Winter Hill Gang. He is the brother-in-law of Arthur
Gianelli who is married to Elizabeth Moore, Connolly's sister.
State police and other federal officers had been trying to imprison Whitey
Bulger for years, but somehow Bulger always avoided getting caught. As
the FBI handler for Bulger and Flemmi, Connolly (who had grown up in
the Old Harbor Housing Project with Bulger) had been protecting them
from prosecution by feeding him information about possible attempts to
catch them.
Connolly was indicted on December 22, 1999 on charges of alerting
Bulger and Flemmi to investigations, falsifying FBI reports to cover their
crimes, and accepting bribes. In 2000, he was charged with additional
racketeering related offenses. He stood trial in 2008 on murder charges
for allegedly helping Whitey Bulger and Steve Flemmi orchestrate a 1982
gangland slaying.
On November 6, 2008, a jury convicted Connolly of second-degree
murder and faces a possible sentence of 30 years to life in prison.
Connolly was due to be sentenced on December 4, 2008 but sentencing
was postponed until January while the judge in the case, Circuit Judge
Stanford Blake, considered a motion by the defense to dismiss the case.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Connolly_(FBI)