John Naimovich – An Insight Into The Whitey Bulger Case: Part 1

Those who have come recently to this blog may have heard the name John Naimovich. Who is that you may wonder and how does he fit here? I didn’t intend to talk about him but having Lt. Bobby Long, Col. Tom Foley and Bookie Jimmy Katz as the first three witnesses in the government’s case made me want to tell a quick outline of his story. Some of it plays into the things we are learning at this trial.

DSC_0201It’s really all because of Naimovich this blog exists. Naimovich was a Massachusetts state trooper who was indicted by the federals for a RICO offense in 1988.  It was alleged that this trooper of 23 years service almost all of it dealing with investigating organized crime had suddenly late in his career gone over to the dark side. He allegedly took money, two or three hundred dollars, near Christmas on one or two occasions which was passed to him under a table at a restaurant from a bookie Francis McIntyre, a knave – may he be forever dishonored – in exchange for giving him inside information on state police and federal operations.

The transaction was witnessed by no other person. The absurdity of the allegation that Naimovich who could have made tens of thousands of dollars, if not hundreds of thousand, if he were so inclined to become corrupt would be taking chicken feed money from a low-level bookie apparently didn’t bother the federals. They wanted him no matter how absurd the charge. And remember, at this time no one thought the federals were other than next to the angels.

McIntye’s story is typical of what we saw when Jimmy Katz testified. Jimmy whose profession was a bookie and whose only hobby was gambling was indicted at least a couple of times by me for bookmaking when I caught him on my wiretaps. He ended up paying a fine or doing a short bit of time. Booking was a crime but one which all the parties consented to being involved in. One of the major abettors of the bookmakers were the local media who had pages after pages filled with the line on every game and the over/under and columnists talking about “best bets”  and otherwise helping the general public place winning bets. It was never considered a major crime but we went after the bookies because gaming was illegal and we hoped to get information against others who were involved in the violence end of the business.

When the federals got Jimmy, they piled on him money laundering and other charges that sent him to prison for 4 years and they had a forfeiture placed on him of a million dollars. He was then brought back to a grand jury where he refused to rat out anyone and given another 18 months for contempt. As Jimmy said, the 18 months was dead time, he’d have to serve that before he went back to serving his 4 year sentence.

Under the federals Jimmy was facing 5 and a half years and his house in Randolph was going to be seized and his wife and children put out on the street. Jimmy was looking at 5 1/2 years of what he called boredom and seeing his family without a house getting by on welfare and food stamps. This was because he took bets over the telephone from people who wanted to place them with him. He never engaged in any violence, but had, as we learned from his testimony, been told by violent men he could only engage in his business if he paid them tribute.

But there was a way out of this big pickle – all Jimmy had to do was tell Freddy Wyshak what the wanted to hear and if Wyshak thought it amounted to “substantial assistance,” Jimmy could walk out the door, save his family, get a new identity and a little help starting his new life. Wyshak wanted to know the names of those violent men who Jimmy had to pay to engage in his occupation.

Wyhsak under the federal criminal laws had the power to take a bookie and make him into a major felon who would end up facing a heavy bit without parole; he also has the power to take a guy like Kevin Weeks who murdered five people, was a multi-year leg breaker and shylock, and a life-long violent criminal and have him serve less time than Jimmy would have served had he done the full bit.

Anyway it’s a strange system we live under that can do that but that’s the system that McIntyre another bookie found himself caught up in when the federals did a wiretap on him (since when did the federals get interested in wiretapping local bookies) and found him engaged in what a bookie would do which is taking bets. But the federals weren’t after McIntryre, they were after John Naimovich.

But why are they after this trooper with an unblemished record?  How it came about will really surprised you.

 

8 Comments

  1. Did Fran McIntyre eventually testify against Trooper Naimovitch ? If so, was McIntyre’s testimony either enticed or coerced by the Feds ? Perhaps knavery – ” dishonest or crafty dealing “, might more accurately be used to describe the actions of the Feds in this rancid, sordid mess !

    • I never trusted her. Too much of a self-promoter overly impressed with herself and caught up in the bullshit of cops.

    • Gus:

      Yes he testified. I’ll spell it out in the Naimovich series coming up over the next few days. It was one of those testimonies that was absolutely coerced. You’ll see how close it mirrored what was done in Whitey’s case. Knavery may be better put on the federals than McIntyre but he did become a federal. After I later indicted him for bookmaking the federals were out talking with the new DA who came from the federal side looking to give him a break but that was after I left the office.

  2. Dear Matt,

    Thank you very much for linking the site up; I have done the same. Today’s posting there is very much on point in considering public servants with unblemished records: https://thefirmestpillar.wordpress.com/2013/06/17/william-bulger-is-not-a-ruthless-killer/

    Respectfully,
    Jay

    • Jay:

      I hope everyone reads the link you sent. It spells out my feelings. Who knows if moe and more people look at the facts without being poisoned by the mainstream media who have all concluded Billy is evil we can begin to help restore his reputation that was cruelly stolen. Thanks.

      • Dear Matt,

        After reading your comment, I hear John Lennon’s “Imagine” playing somewhere in the background.

        Restoring that reputation is undoubtedly the right thing to do. The facts are plain to see, if people’s eyes are open to see them. The recent comments are above and beyond any covenant of good faith and fair dealing; between the British rag which refuses to remove the headline implying Bill to be a ruthless murderer, and Jeff Jacoby’s Globe article today, there are real issues when untruths are construed as facts, masked as opinions, and the People’s consciousness is inevitably dulled.

        I guess that sometimes, duty just falls on our heads like a tree cut down, whether we want it or not. So it is that perhaps we must plant the seeds of something new, and hope it takes root.

        Sincerely,
        Jason

        • Jay:
          The call of duty can be an unpleasant sound uprooting some from their feathered bed and demanding they no longer stand on the side lines. I was very happy in my prior life fortunate with enough to get by on and engage in my hobbies. Then Whitey got arrested; I published my book I’d written 8 or 9 years ago and started this blog. To do this right I had to look deeply into some things and then I began I got the scent of mischief and falsehood. What I’d believed before didn’t hold up. I began to write about it as candidly and openly as I could telling the truth as I saw it knowing my views would alienate some people. But I decided I could not stay silent. I’ve been fortunate to have others who are interested in what I seek to have which is a strong, free, and as good of America as envisioned by those who pledge their lives and fortunes to bring it about. We used to be able to depend on the media but this case has shown how a false story can gain currency and be repeated over and over until it takes on the veneer of truth.