BOSTON — As lawyers for James "Whitey" Bulger begin to defend him against a massive racketeering indictment charging him in 19 killings, one big question remains: Will he testify?
Some lawyers not connected to the case say Bulger has too much baggage to testify, including a prior criminal record and a long reputation as an organized crime figure.
But others say Bulger's case is different because, at age 83, he knows he is likely to spend the rest of his life in prison and may be more interested in settling scores than being acquitted.
Bulger said as much in letters he wrote to a friend from prison after he was captured in Santa Monica, Calif., following 16 years on the run as one of the nation's most-wanted fugitives.
Bulger told his friend he wanted to set the record straight on two fronts: First, he was not an FBI informant, as prosecutors and many witnesses at the trial have claimed, and second, he did not kill women, according to a book called "Whitey Bulger: America's Most Wanted Gangster and the Manhunt That Brought Him to Justice" written by Boston Globe reporters Shelley Murphy and Kevin Cullen.
"This whole trial is an effort on his part to overcompensate for his informant label," said Boston attorney Anthony Cardinale, who helped expose the corrupt relationship between the FBI and Bulger while he represented former New England Mob boss Francis "Cadillac Frank" Salemme.
"He's doing anything he can to have some shred of a reputation left," Cardinale said.
But despite the impulse to want to rebut testimony that he ratted on the Mafia and members of his own gang, Bulger would open himself up to even more damaging evidence if he decides to take the witness stand, Cardinale said. He said prosecutors could then bring in evidence that when he was charged in a string of bank robberies in the 1950s, he ratted out his co-defendants in that case.