upper waypoint

Whitey Bulger at Alcatraz

Save ArticleSave Article
Failed to save article

Please try again

News of notorious gangster Whitey Bulger's capture is beyond front page news in Boston. It's the only news, in fact, that greeted anyone who might have glanced at their Boston Globe this morning, with no less than eight Bulger-related articles highlighted on the front page.

But one chapter in the Bulger story was written locally, in a sense. Bulger took up residence, albeit involuntarily, at Alcatraz from 1959 - 1963, part of a nine-year stretch for a string of armed robberies. Here's his mug shot at The Rock.

Photo: Bureau of Prisons

And here's a reprint of a 1988 Boston Herald article about the relationship between Bulger and Clarence Carnes (also known as "The Choctaw Kid") that developed at the island prison.

According to the article, Bulger said that Carnes had taken him under his wing at Alcatraz, and when Carnes died, Bulger had his body exhumed from a "pauper's grave" outside a Missouri prison hospital and sent to a burying ground on Choctaw land in Oklahoma.

What a sweetheart.

Sponsored

lower waypoint
next waypoint
Impact of California Fast Food Worker Wage Increase Still Too Early to GaugeMap: What You Need to Earn to Afford a Median-Priced Home in Your County in CaliforniaBerkeley Passes Legal Protections for Polyamory, Joining OaklandNewsom Eyes Cuts to California’s $500M Anti-Foreclosure Fund for RentersEarly Bay Area Heat Wave Brings Hottest Temperatures of the Year So FarNeighbors to Rally in Support of Black SF Man Who Received Racist ThreatsBerkeley Schools Chief Rejects Allegations of 'Pervasive' Antisemitism in Capitol Hill TestimonyUC Berkeley Opens Civil Rights Investigation Into Confrontation at Dean’s HomeInside Sutro Baths, San Francisco's Once Grand Bathing PalaceIs Hollywood’s New ‘Magical, Colorblind Past’ a Good Thing?