A former bookmaker from the Boston area told jurors in federal court this morning that he made protection payments to associates of notorious gangster James âœWhiteyâ Bulger, and he did so under the understanding that, if he did not, Bulger could resort to violence.
James Katz said he dealt often with Bulgerâ™s right-hand man, Stephen âœThe Riflemanâ Flemmi, and it was his understanding that they ran their gang together.
âœYou knew Stevie Flemmi had a reputation that he had killed several people?â Bulgerâ™s lawyer, J.W. Carney Jr. asked.
âœI would never want to run into him,â Katz acknowledged.
Bulger, 83, is charged in 32 counts of a racketeering indictment that alleges that while running a criminal enterprise from 1972 to 2000, he participated in 19 murders; extorted bookmakers and drug dealers, and businessmen; laundered his criminal profits through real estate transactions; and stockpiled an arsenal of weapons.
Katz told jurors that he worked with other bookies and that he paid $500 a month â” $1,000 a month during football season â” in âœrentâ to Bulgerâ™s gang, and often drove directly to Bulgerâ™s headquarters in a garage near the old Boston Garden to make the payment.
He also testified that Flemmi and Bulger increased the amount of money that gamblers would have to pay to place a bet, putting more money in their pockets. And he said that Bulger funded local loansharks.
Katz said people who crossed Flemmi and Bulger faced danger. âœYou can wind up in the hospital, so to say,â he said.
Under Carneyâ™s cross-examination, Katz acknowledged that he had given differing accounts of how many times he had met Bulger. He also acknowledged that his dealings were not with Bulger but with Flemmi and others who claimed to be working for Bulgerâ™s gang, which he called âœThe Bulger Group.â
Katz, now 72, was placed in a witness protection program as part of his agreement with prosecutors to cooperate and testify against Bulger. He pleaded guilty in 1992 in federal court to gambling, money laundering, and wire fraud, and was sentenced to four years in prison. He also had to forfeit $1 million from a check cashing scheme that he acknowledged laundered millions of dollars.
Katz had a history of gambling convictions in state court and had served months-long prison sentences. âœStory of my life,â he said.
But federal prosecutors brought a federal case against him and used the threat of longer prison sentences to pressure him to testify against higher-level criminals.
Katz was initially reluctant to testify, even with the protection of an immunity agreement. He was held in contempt of court, and threatened with an additional 18 months in prison beyond his four-year term.
Then Katz agreed to cooperate, saying he feared prosecutors would seek the forfeiture of his home. He has a wife and three children.
Carney suggested that Katz was shaping his testimony to implicate Bulger so that he could satisfy his agreement with prosecutors to provide âœsubstantial assistance.â
Bulgerâ™s long-awaited trial began this week in US District Court in Boston. Prosecutors say Bulger was a ruthless killer who terrorized Bostonâ™s underworld for decades. His legend grew when he eluded a worldwide manhunt for 16 years after his indictment in 1995 and when it was learned that he had been protected by the FBI, which considered him a prized informant.
On Thursday, the jury heard from Thomas J. Foley, a retired Massachusetts State Police colonel who testified that FBI agents constantly sabotaged his efforts to target Bulger, forcing investigators to rely on a hitman and other unsavory characters to build a case against the gangster and expose his corrupt relationship with the bureau.
Bulgerâ™s defense team tried to use Foleyâ™s testimony to argue that the FBI was so corrupt in its handling of the notorious South Boston gangster that its claim that he was an informant should not be believed. The defense also grilled Foley about whether the prosecution team let hitman-turned-government witness John Martorano refuse to testify against his friends, as long as he cooperated against Bulger.