Ex‑FBI Agent Connolly Cites New Whitey Bulger Manuscript in Bid to Overturn Murder Conviction
Attorneys for former FBI agent John Connolly have filed a new motion in Miami‑Dade Circuit Court seeking to vacate his Florida murder conviction, arguing that recently disclosed FBI reports and a handwritten manuscript by mob boss James “Whitey” Bulger show Connolly was framed. The defense says the Bulger materials, seized from his apartment after his 2011 arrest but kept in a sealed envelope until 2024, contain statements that Connolly did not leak information used in the 1982 killing of businessman John Callahan in Miami and instead identify another FBI agent, John Morris, as Bulger’s mole while calling Connolly a “sacrificial lamb.” Connolly’s lawyers contend prosecutors violated their constitutional duty by withholding this and other exculpatory evidence for years, part of what they describe as a broader pattern of misconduct by a longtime Miami‑Dade prosecutor who has since resigned amid separate misconduct reports. Connolly, now 85 and released on compassionate grounds in 2021 from a 40‑year sentence for second‑degree murder and racketeering, was accused of tipping Bulger and Stephen Flemmi to an FBI probe of Callahan; courts have previously found some evidence was wrongly withheld but not material enough to overturn the verdict, a conclusion the defense now says must be revisited in light of Bulger’s own writings. The case reopens longstanding questions about FBI handling of informants in Boston and the extent to which law‑enforcement and prosecutorial misconduct may have tainted one of the most notorious public‑corruption prosecutions of the past several decades.
📌 Key Facts
- Connolly’s attorneys filed a new motion on March 17, 2026, in Miami‑Dade Circuit Court to vacate his murder conviction.
- The motion cites FBI reports and an unfinished handwritten manuscript seized from James “Whitey” Bulger’s apartment after his 2011 arrest, which defense lawyers say were hidden in a sealed envelope until disclosed in 2024.
- Bulger allegedly wrote and told FBI agents that Connolly did not leak information leading to John Callahan’s 1982 killing, instead naming FBI agent John Morris as his source and describing Connolly as a “sacrificial lamb.”
- Connolly, now 85, was convicted in Florida of second‑degree murder and racketeering in connection with Callahan’s execution‑style slaying and was granted compassionate release in 2021 due to terminal illness and COVID‑19 risk.
- A longtime prosecutor on the Connolly case resigned from the Miami‑Dade State Attorney’s Office after misconduct reports, and the Bulger materials were only then revealed to Connolly’s defense in 2024 by Chief Assistant State Attorney Jose Arrojo.
📊 Relevant Data
James 'Whitey' Bulger was charged with participation in 19 murders, many of which were committed while he served as an FBI informant from 1975 to 1990.
Whitey Bulger — Wikipedia
The Winter Hill Gang was predominantly composed of Irish-Americans, in a city where people of Irish ancestry made up approximately 22.8% of the metropolitan Boston population as of the early 2010s (with similar proportions in 1980), reflecting ethnic overrepresentation in this organized crime group; historical causes include mass Irish immigration to Boston due to the Great Famine (1845-1852) and subsequent socioeconomic discrimination leading to ghettoization and crime as a form of resistance.
History of Irish Americans in Boston — Wikipedia
Boston's organized crime in the 1970s and 1980s featured ethnic divisions, with Irish-American gangs like the Winter Hill Gang competing with Italian-American groups such as the Patriarca crime family for territory and activities.
Patriarca crime family — Wikipedia
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