Anonymous ID: cc792c March 29, 2024, 7:19 p.m. No.20650483   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun   >>0491 >>0502

>>20650335

The Boston Globe wrote:

 

"[Mike] Albano [former Parole Board Member who was threatened by two F.B.I. agents for considering parole for the men imprisoned for a crime they did not commit] was appalled that, later that same year, Mueller was appointed FBI director, because it was Mueller, first as an assistant US attorney then as the acting U.S. attorney in Boston, who wrote letters to the parole and pardons board throughout the 1980s opposing clemency for the four men framed by FBI lies. Of course, Mueller was also in that position while Whitey bulger was helping the FBI cart off his criminal competitors even as he buried bodies in shallow graves along the Neponsetโ€ฆ"

 

In December 2000, Durham revealed secret FBI documents that convinced a judge to vacate the 1968 murder convictions of "four other FBI informants because they'd been framed by Robert Mueller's FBI.

 

"In 2007," to help protect Whitey bulger (that's what all those people were held in jail for) "the documents helped Salvati, Limone, and the families of the two other men who had died in prison to win a US $101.7 million civil judgment against the government."

 

Durham got the two surviving framed men released from prison.

 

Robert Mueller was knee-deep in this scandal, along with Andrew Weissman and the agent sent to prison, but because Reno gave him very limited authority, Durham was not able to prosecute Mueller, who was not in the FBI at the time.

 

Mueller kept four innocent people in jail for years to protect the informant status of Whitey bulger, a mass-murdering Boston mobster who ended up dying in California, and it ended up costing the government $100 million plus in civil judgments.