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Whitey Bulger is dead!

Natural causes...if you're a gangster.

Bulger's case is interesting though. He was an FBI informant and instead of the normal inconsequential perks a source might receive he essentially got a walk away on any crime he committed.
 
He will most definently not be missed.
The BUlger case was the worst scandal in FBI History;one FBI agent actually did a hit for Whitey. He was convicted of Murder later on.
The Movie "Black Mass" is pretty accurate about what went on,though the book is better.
 
He will most definently not be missed.
The BUlger case was the worst scandal in FBI History;one FBI agent actually did a hit for Whitey. He was convicted of Murder later on.
The Movie "Black Mass" is pretty accurate about what went on,though the book is better.

I'll see your Bulger, and raise you a Robert Hanssen.
 


:D

But in all seriousness, here’s a more complex and possibility even more infuriating example: two of the 9/11 hijackers - Nawaf al-Hazmi and Khalid al-Midhar - lived in a San Diego apartment in 2000 due to the generous assistance of a possible/probable Saudi intelligence officer (Omar al-Bayoumi, who himself was apparently receiving direct or indirect financial assistance from Saudi Ambassador Prince Bandar and his wife, as was at least one other associate - Osama Basnan, who was openly known to be a big fan of another, more famous Osama...).

These were, of course, the same two hijackers that the CIA failed to tell the FBI about for a very long time. The twist? One of Hazmi and Midhar’s roommates in that San Diego apartment was an FBI informant.

Not unsettling in the slightest...
 
These were, of course, the same two hijackers that the CIA failed to tell the FBI about for a very long time. The twist? One of Hazmi and Midhar’s roommates in that San Diego apartment was an FBI informant.

Not unsettling in the slightest...

Oh, and so was the father of the Orlando night club shooting.
 
:D

But in all seriousness, here’s a more complex and possibility even more infuriating example: two of the 9/11 hijackers - Nawaf al-Hazmi and Khalid al-Midhar - lived in a San Diego apartment in 2000 due to the generous assistance of a possible/probable Saudi intelligence officer (Omar al-Bayoumi, who himself was apparently receiving direct or indirect financial assistance from Saudi Ambassador Prince Bandar and his wife, as was at least one other associate - Osama Basnan, who was openly known to be a big fan of another, more famous Osama...).

These were, of course, the same two hijackers that the CIA failed to tell the FBI about for a very long time. The twist? One of Hazmi and Midhar’s roommates in that San Diego apartment was an FBI informant.

Not unsettling in the slightest...

Conspiracy Theory Section thataway....
 
Uh, because you can't arrest a person until he actually does something?
Until you can actually prove the person has done something is more the issue...unless they're the wrong color and you're scared, in which case arrest is the least of that person's problems.
 
Police can pretty much arrest anyone they want to.. They worry about proving it later.
It's the "pretty much" qualifier to concern ourselves with when talking about organized crime. They have lawyers - good ones even - which makes arresting them without evidence a more dicey proposition that can result in lawsuits. Arresting and charging someone means that law enforcement has to present their evidence, and if that evidence is insufficient then it could mean compromising the means by which the evidence was gathered - burned witnesses, bugs, phone taps, etc.
 

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