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We’ve been hearing a lot lately about the need for the FBI to protect its informants. The FBI originally had an integrity problem under J. Edgar Hoover, who was a closeted gay man that favored blackmail as a pressure tactic. I used to think that the agency’s internal controls improved after Hoover died in 1972, but only a few years later the FBI recruited the Boston Irish gangster Whitey Bulger as an informant against the Italian mob.
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Even after Bulger was on the run in 1995, the FBI continued to hide the fact he had been an informant, until the truth finally came out. Over a period of 15 years the FBI seemed incapable of capturing Bulger, and eventually the U.S. Marshals Service was brought into the manhunt. Bulger was caught nine months later.