
He was my grandfather’s first cousin, my first cousin twice removed; a bookmaker, loan shark, thief, World War II vet, drunk, killer. He was a member of the Winter Hill Gang, the most notorious Boston-area outfit of the last half-century. There are Winter Hill guys who have admitted to murdering 20 people, guys who tried to run guns for the IRA and guys who fixed horse races up and down the East Coast.Some of the Hill’s associates started grabbing headlines in the early 1960s; some of them, like James “Whitey” Bulger, continue to do so to this day. Lots of people died. Lots of people were sent to prison. So being related, even distantly, to one of the main players in that gang is, well, strange.My father’s family – a clan of nurses and engineers -- know next to nothing about Joe, who died in 1997. They are not the sort of people who rob warehouses or break out of prison.

Annoncering


A newspaper report of my cousin Joe's prison break-out. Click to enlarge.We also talk about the extensive length of Joe’s rap sheet. In 1961, he was part of a crew that robbed a dairy, for which Joe was thrown in jail. In 1963, he broke out of prison. He was on the lam for almost three years. While on the run, he threatened a witness who had testified against him, as well as the cops who had spearheaded the investigation into the armed robbery.
Annoncering

Annoncering

Annoncering
Annoncering
The video trailer for Bobby's book.Paul Moran was a youth lobbing snowballs in the projects of Somerville when he pelted a blue Chevy Impala.The car stopped, an old man got out. Moran was with a group of friends. The largest of them suckered the old man in the face.“His head didn’t move. His eyes didn’t move. He just said, ‘Now I’m going to fucking kill you,’” says Paul. “That’s when we knew we had problems.”It was Paul’s first encounter with Joe. About a month later, he hit a passing black Cadillac with a snow shovel. Joe and Howie Winter were in the car. Paul, who would spend his fatherless adolescence stealing cars, selling PCP and drinking heavily, ran. But Howie and Joe let it be known in the neighbourhood that they needed to see him. He now needed to pay off a debt.Paul became the gang’s errand boy. He would sweep the garage, fetch coffee frappes and hot cheese sandwiches for the gang and hand out bottles of Seagram’s Seven to the cops who came around at Christmas. He stayed for more than seven years.We are driving around Somerville. He is telling stories. You could chop his accent with a meat cleaver.He tells me the nun and machine gun story, which my aunt later rejects. He says Joe questioned Whitey Bulger’s propensity for using machine guns. Joe, he says, liked to use a handgun and get close so the person would know.Paul brings me to the spot of the snowball incident. The projects have either been remodelled or demolished. He now lives in New Hampshire and has been sober for more than three decades. Joe is 15 years in the ground. Everything has changed.
Annoncering