Bulger linked to Marita 
Ann IRA arms shipment

A claim that notorious Boston crime boss James ‘Whitey’ Bulger was involved in a shipment of arms for the IRA is set to be aired.
Undated BBC handout photo of John Crawley speaking to the BBCÕs Spotlight On The Troubles programme in the third episode, as a claim that notorious Boston crime boss James ÒWhitey Bulger was involved in a shipment of arms for the IRAUndated BBC handout photo of John Crawley speaking to the BBCÕs Spotlight On The Troubles programme in the third episode, as a claim that notorious Boston crime boss James ÒWhitey Bulger was involved in a shipment of arms for the IRA
Undated BBC handout photo of John Crawley speaking to the BBCÕs Spotlight On The Troubles programme in the third episode, as a claim that notorious Boston crime boss James ÒWhitey Bulger was involved in a shipment of arms for the IRA

The allegation concerns the Marita Ann trawler which was intercepted off the Co Kerry coast by the Irish navy on September 29 1984.

It resulted in the seizure of seven tonnes of arms.

Bulger, one of the FBI’s most wanted criminals, was on the run for 16 years before he was caught in 2011.

In 2013, he was convicted of 11 murders.

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He was found dead in a US federal prison in West Virginia last year in what police are investigating as a homicide.

The latest episode of the new BBC Northern Ireland series Spotlight On The Troubles: A Secret History is set to link Bulger to the IRA gun running operation.

Those interviewed on the programme, which is set to air tomorrow, include New York-born former US marine John Crawley, who went on to join the IRA.

He said that he was ordered to set up a new IRA arms network in the United States.

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“I wasn’t given any advice on anything, you know, just get weapons. I was given a five dollar note that’s cut in an erratic way, and I was to meet somebody in Boston who had the other half of this note,” he tells the programme.

The torn five dollar bill led to Patrick Nee, described in the programme as an IRA arms supplier and associate of Bulger.

In autumn 1984, the seven-tonne arsenal of weapons was delivered to Gloucester, north-east of Boston, for shipment to Ireland on board a fishing boat that the south Boston mob gang had bought and renamed the Valhalla.

“Total cost was in the $1.2 million over a two-year period, the boat being the most expensive, I think that cost 400,000 – fishing boats are expensive,” Mr Nee told the programme, adding that the money for the boat came from “local criminals who were persuaded to donate”.

The programme will allege that Bulger was parked nearby and used a radio scanner to check police calls as the boat was loaded.