Read Brutal: The Untold Story of My Life Inside Whitey Bulger's Irish Mob Online
Authors: Kevin Weeks; Phyllis Karas
Kevin O’Neil, one of the three O’Neil brothers who owned Triple O’s. A codefendant of mine, O’Neil was indicted along with me in 1999.
Rotary Variety and the liquor store, both owned by Jimmy, Stevie, and me, were conveniently side by side.
At a Pennsylvania paintball tournament in 1999. My team won both the five and ten man divisions in the ZAP Amateur International Open.
Brian Halloran, who really did have a balloon-shaped head, was the first murder I participated in. I called it in and Jimmy did the rest.
Michael Donahue made the fatal mistake of giving a ride to Brian Halloran and was killed in the hit.
Anthony’s Pier 4 restaurant still exists, right across the street from where the Halloran hit took place.
The front-page headline of the Boston
Herald American
the next day, about the Halloran and Donahue murders on the waterfront
The article in the
Herald American
(May 12, 1982) showed the shot-up Datsun.
The screen house at Stevie Flemmi’s parents’ house on 832 East Third Street, where Stevie, Jimmy, and I hid a cache of weapons and ammunition. It was also used as a place to extort money from people.
The pier at Castle Island where Jimmy and I threw off Bucky Barrett’s clothes and belongings on an August night in 1983, hours after Bucky was killed in the basement of 799 East Third Street.
The
Valhalla
returned to Boston after transferring a shipment of arms to the IRA off the Irish coast.
John McIntyre was killed on November 30, 1984, for informing on the
Valhalla
arms shipment.
The triple-murder house at 799 East Third Street where John McIntyre, Bucky Barrett, and Debbie Hussey were killed between 1983 and 1985.