This guy served 12 years in prison for following a code no one else adhered to, and considers it his crowning achievement. This is the employee bosses dream about.
Billy, do you even hear yourself. Let me open your eyes snd show you what youre being an apologist (verbal defender) of.... You perform illegal activities in a location that is "claimed" by a local crime figure, and that claim is by their own assettion, they dont have deeds to 90% of the area they are claiming. They expect you to take the proceeds from that illegal activity and kick up 10 to 25% of it to a person that didnt help plan it, took none of the risk, and the ONLY reason you do it is because if you continue doing it without paying, they will get another guy who does illegal stuff to come remove you and leave your own biological family destitute. Then on top of that, the local crime figure at some point will be not smart and bring another not smart person into the organization, and they will attract the attention of the authorities, and to avoid a sentence, they will flip and provide evidence against YOU. And it was all because they got greedy and chose money over being smart, and being protective of the people already working for them. Now you want to assert that there is 'honor' in any of that. So again, do you hear yourself. I mean you tell other people they don't know anything but youre the one who can't seem to recognize a (bleep) deal that is. Honor is the religion they sell you into accepting it.
Well duh, I don't think anyone is going to theaters to watch movies about accountants and engineers. Movies about dangerous thugs is what sells especially about the Mafia
His main business was fear. Forcing business owners into paying a "protection" fee. If they didn't pay, they were tortured, killed or had their businesses burned down. Innocent people just trying to feed their families.
Yes and he is absurd for claiming to be a standup guy… Based only on his refusal to testify against other vile criminals, which would have helped society by reducing crime.
He also shows very little remorse for all of the evil that he did. Saying he would have chosen boxing in retrospect is not remorse in and of itself. it sounds like the main reason he would have chosen boxing in retrospect is because it would have prevented him from being in jail for a dozen years. But he doesn’t show hardly any remorse for being involved in killing and maiming people, getting lots of people addicted to drugs, stealing from many people, terrorizing his own community and the stabilizing society in general. How casually and unemotionally he talks about all of those evil things and kind of justifies it… Reminds me of the famous saying about the banality of evil.
Thats how the world works and always has worked dog eat dog you think people become multi millionaires by caring for other peoples feelings and emotions or about their quality of life our whole government is a mafia go judge them they’ve done it on a way bigger scale than these guys
All of the above comments, I couldn’t agree with more. I’m surprised that there aren’t the usual counterpoint comments arguing in favor of this man’s chosen lifestyle. There are a lot of people out there who defend and justify that life. The vast majority of them knowing what they know from glamorized movies and a dose of their own dysfunctional reality.
@@bmledoux Same, Montreal and Quebec do remind me a lot of Europe, love the old architecture and they’re also basically the only cities in Canada with pedestrian streets within the city centre.
"I can't let someone steal from me, because then everyone else will. I have to send a message" says the guy who robbed places many times. It's like one of those guys who tailgates all the time but gets upset the moment someone tailgates him.
A lot of people went through the samething with other Irish and Italian mobsters in the city/region. You’d be surprised how many people have grandfathers who worked for Whitey or his competition.
That’s true Whitey was a fed ci . The reality of being in a gang or a mafia - is that you are FAR far more likely to be taken out by one of your fellow brothers, then your actual opposition . this is of course, because of the insulation factor. When a mobster is sentenced to death- his executioner is generally someone he see’s every day. A stranger would put people on high guard .
I live in Southie, have family that was involved in all of this, crazy how brain washed they all are/were... I still hear people say "man I wish Whitey was still around, things were so much better" It's fucked up
1978 my dad had a 'crane operator' on his payroll at the docks. That guy made 150k and would showup to work one day a week. He was a mob plant and having him on the books was the price to do business at the docks.
$150K in 1978?!!!! That’s absolutely insane. The inflation calc says that is worth $755,510 in 2024. Did your father’s business ever benefit from his presence? Like did the mafia ever provide contacts or contracts to him in exchange for the job, or was it simply to keep them pacified and avoid violence?
I really enjoyed this interview and you can tell this guy is the real deal and lived that life. Insider does a nice job with these types of organized crime interviews. It has to be hard knowing you were a stand up guy who did their years of prison time for an organization where the boss was an informant.
@@DMWBN3 " really enjoyed " " real deal " " nice job " " hard knowing " " stand up guy " too many positive figures of speach for my liking ..they are scum of the earth . Dont glorify them. The boss may have been an informant. But this one cosigned it all & in his words "felt nothing " in re to any of the murders . He comes off as a pick me fanboy, who shouldnt have " stood up" . Imo
@@natashab3412 Okay, I apologize for watching and enjoying this video. I will check with you first before commenting in the future until I get your okay about what is acceptable.
That’s something I could never figure out. LCN guys wearing $3k suits, all driving Caddy’s and Lincoln’s, right in the face of the feds. Jimmy drove a Malibu, and wore casual slacks, sport shirts, and a light jacket. If you passed him on the street, you’d never suspect he was the biggest gangster in Boston. You don’t flaunt anything. Man that’s rule #1. On the street, or in the can, be the quietest guy in the room.
They're fools bring attention on to themselves. The likes of Joe Bonanno, Gambino, accardo etc all dressed casually and they are top of the food chain as far as the Italians went. Dressing up was all well and good before the days of the taxman asking for a receipt, but only a fool would rub it into the guys who are carrying out surveillance on them.
Because that's a red herring. At some point all the gangsters figured out the IRS made doing that pointless. See eventually the IRS just looks at a guy, living even a humble middle class lifestyle and starts asking "wait, how is this guy even surviving? He has NO income stream. This guy has a car, how? He doesn't have a job! His family seems to all being doing well, and none of them have jobs? This guy's living in an ok-ish apartment, with NO taxable money coming in! Investigate him pronto." At that point you figure being 'humble' is pointless. You'd have to literally live in squalor to not actually alert the IRS. At that point you figure " F being humble, we have to focus on having legitimate businesses as fronts and launder money, then we can have our cake and eat it too!"
I sort of admire his reason for not snitching. He said I'm a man and can do the time for my decisions and not put the burden of my decisions on others.
@@matthew92604 Actually worse people than Don Pablo are currently residing at the white house. Also before many war criminals accountable for hundreds of thousands if not millions were residents of the white house.
"The Irish, they had some great clothing..." Even while calling out the Italians for getting dressed up he felt the need to point out that the Irish dressed well too.
There was some glorification including his claim to be a standup guy for refusing to testify against vile, dangerous criminals, which would have helped society by reducing crime.
I can basically relate to the scenario where he grew up, but in another state, during the sixties and seventies. A place known as housing projects, but today, mostly occupied by blacks and other people. Where I grew up was a large Irish presence and also others, such as Italians, Polish, etc. Basically, all blue collar workers, single mothers, disabled veterans, etc. Most of these projects were built during WW2, to provide affordable housing for the workers of nearby industries and such to support the war effort. After the war, most of the housing remained and were managed by local towns and communities. To this day, I can honestly say, that environment was truly a blessing. It was a place where everyone knew you and it was like a huge family. The most down to earth place of great caring people, that had your back. Was there possibly nefarious stuff going on there? Of course, just as it does today, in all levels of society. If anyone can't believe that, then they are totally blind. If I had to live my life over again, I would certainly select that place to begin again. The reason being, it teaches you respect, to help one another, and sometimes the real raw truths of what the important things in life are.
Worked as Correctional Officer in Oklahoma. The Irish mob guys were respectful to us as long as we were respectful to them. Despite the differences we had they always had the most respect and organization on the pods.
In Oklahoma? Guessing it was a federal prison then, otherwise IDK if there's a single Irish person in Oklahoma. I could be wrong, IDK. Either way, I imagine of all the white gangs the Irish mobsters were not very well represented, which may also have contributed to them being low profile in jail. Even the Italian Mafia, there's some guys there but it's almost like the less organized you are going into prison the better. It all really boils down to skin color anyway from what I understand.
@@voteZDLR No, the gang in OK is a bunch of white trash wiggaaaah types. They aren't affiliated with Ireland or the Boston guys. At least, I have seen no indication they are...
My dad hung at the leedsville, but he died when I was kid. He brought me there alot, but the little club upstairs was off limits, never got a chance to ask him why.
IRA recruiting? I doubt that very much. The organization almost exclusively operated in the UK and the Republic of Ireland. It had its alliances and connections in other countries, sure, but members of the organization living in other countries were almost always born and raised Irishmen.
Volunteers dony usually work on that side of the pond, they operate here in Ireland. Dony make much sense to recruit Americans, I've never met an American volunteer either....... But obviously I dony know every volunteer so I could be talking out me arsh 😂
@@whittysworkshop982lots of money and weapons came from America the bar hes talking about was associated with bulger who supported the ira and was caught sending guns over so recruiting is probably the wrong word but there was lots of fundraising and sponsorship requests
I hate gangs, but he s the kind that I can at least relate to, no theater, no drama, just the straight facts, all business, cold. he leaves no guesses, draws the lines very clearly. also why I d trust him being honest now, a strong character, he does what he says, try to stop him... inspiring type in any field I ll say. good show bro
I’m the home care nurse who cared for the elderly mobsters who lived in modest homes with high end furniture, the best dishes, etc. I never asked they never talked but their names are familiar from growing up North of Boston. Some scared the living daylights out of me…dead fish eyes following me. Others, if I didn’t know WHO they were by reputation, I would never know they were mobbed up. Mostly, the Mafia and WHG guys. I shake my head at how casual we were about this back in the 70’s. If you didn’t get into their business you were fairly safe.
I grew up on D street in Southie and later moved in the 80s to Palm Beach Florida. My dad had a "no show" job plus did a lot of Union strike breaking stuff. Basically guys like him get sent to change peoples minds to get them back to work. In Florida he loan sharked and run books. I met a lot of his crew, Mike D, "little" Mike, Butch "the butcher", guys with colorful names. A lot of movies etc glamorize this stuff but as a son of one of these guys it's not glamorous. My father was a Veteran and boxer in the Army. He was a violent man, at home and in general. He'd leave the house at all times of the day and stay gone sometimes. He was always with his crew and we were secondary. New cars, wads of cash in his pocket and arguments with my mother over my fathers side women were the norm. My father had a coldness to him like a shark and you knew he'd killed and hurt people. As a teen I ran away but developed a weird friendship with him. He told me criminal lessons and advice on stuff. I once got arrested because someone said I threatened them with a mini 14. They couldn't find the gun because I had hid it in my fathers yard. The cops on a tip checked my fathers house but couldn't find it. My father after I had been released with no charges, was obviously mad at me for having cops at his house. But he wasn't mad because I got in trouble, he was mad that I didn't give him a heads up that I buried a gun in the yard. Years later I caught a charge in Boston for a fight on the T. I called my father and he talked to me on how I needed to handle myself in jail. In my twenties I was facing Fed time for credit card fraud. Basically buying stuff on the phone with credit card numbers and we'd puck up the stuff. He talked me thru it and kept me from being a rat and not incriminating myself. The charges ended up being dropped because tgey couldn't prove I did a pickup. The point is, that as cool as I thought my dad was back then, I realize now that I'm a dad that I never really had a "father" because he belonged to that life.
Thanks for sharing your story to deglorify the lives of mobsters. While watching this video, I kept thinking that despite this guys Irish charm, he seemed very cold inside.
I've worked with many Irish on Melbourne construction sites. I honestly cannot say a bad word about one, and this is over 25 years. The work ethic, the manners, just everything about the Irish presents good men. I'd confidently say if you see the bad side of an Irishman, it's likely you're the one out of line.
That's Hollywood that glorified that image. Corporations today commit crimes that are 100 times worse. No one is interested in the ethics of corporate America.
LOL How was Flemmi's health ? Outstanding ??? 🎉😢😅😅 Did White B. Follow Suit ? Any of those Veg.Juice recipes contain Vodka, Whiskey or Rum ????😊😊😊. & Served at the Bar ?
@@vsznry I liked The Town (?) If I'm thinking of the right film, the one with Ben Affleck and they're from Charlestown in Boston and they are one of the many gangs who were carrying out the many cash in transit robberies.
😂😂😂. I'm off Irish origin born in England. My Grandson is like this fellow. When he was born, he had a ruddy complexion, and Red hair. We jokingly called him the boy with no eyebrows, because they were White, you could hardly see them. 😆
@@jasonthompson4079 I can tell you from having an Irish accent that Americans in general even bostonians sound Nothing like the Irish listen to a guy talk from Boston then listen to real Irish people havin6a talk it sounds nothing alike
I grew up in big (9 kid) Irish family in Buffalo. My Dad was Customs and DEA. My brothers and I still found trouble here and there. I'm probably lucky to be where I am today.
@@samanthab1923 my 2nd eldest brother became a cop. he was kicked off the force for some indiscretion of which i don't know the full details. the funny thing is they asked him to join because he caught a running suspect by shouting "Freeze, Mother Fucker!" We picked that up from a 70's movie and said it to each other often for fun. He got really good at it. The perp. dove onto the ground and was cuffed.
Oh yeah read and watched Docs on him ..that man was fearless and going toe to toe with the Italians doing what he needed to do..most people would have folded or hid out.DG was Tough
@@DetectiveTrupo203 yeah really big there’s some interesting podcasts talking about them actually. There was some huge biker wars back in the day in Montreal. I saw they did a video on the Hells angels already so just kinda thought it’d be cool too here from there perspective
My distant relatives, the Dubois brothers, had a big gang time presence in East Montreal. Different generation and distant relatives. Never met them. Just connected on the family tree.
I lived in Boston in 1999-2000. I’ve lived all over the world and Boston is one of my favorite cities. I’m a huge history buff so that city is perfect for that as well. I lived on the Woburn/Stoneham border ,I think it was route 28,which is about 12-15 minutes north of Boston and then I lived in Back Bay with a friend who rented me a room in this beautiful brownstone he had facing MIT. I would hang out at a bar/restaurant called Daisy Buchanan’s which was on Newbury Street. It’s no longer there which is a shame cause I have so many memories there. I ended up dating one of the waitresses/bartender there and we had a great relationship and we still talk to one another to this day 25 years later. I haven’t been back to Boston since 2004 so I need to go back. I’m sure that it’s changed a lot. I was there during the Big Swig,I mean the Big Dig lol in 1999-2000. Im from Phoenix and if it wasn’t so cold there I would definitely live there
@@pantshidder like I said I love that town. My buddy Jimmy Gallagher who’s from Dot just recently passed away and I couldn’t go to his funeral which sucked but I’m planning to go back next summer for sure. That’s good that it’s a lot nicer now. I also miss the food in the North End and I use to go to this Pub in Southie that had the best Steak Tips. Man that place was good. I forgot the name of it but I remember that when you go over that little bridge in Southie it’s right there to the right. Boston is an amazing city and I have so many great memories there. When I first moved to Woburn the company that I worked for got us company housing and I got there at night from the airport and I just went into my room and crashed out. The next morning I look out my window and there was a cemetery right next door. It tripped me out because here in Phoenix we don’t have cemetery’s in residential neighborhoods. I got over pretty quickly because though but it did trip me out
Boston is a great town but changed much since early 2000's. I loved Daisy Buchanan's when i ventured into the city. "04 with the Red Sox finally winning was a great time. Stay well and come back when it's warm!
What about the ties to sports and recruiting of boxers and then football players. How about the ties to New Jersey and Pennsylvania. I keep hearing there's ties into the ownership at major sports teams too. The ties into state legislatures and law enforement from local to national is interesting too.
Great story.... Wow !! I don't follow the Irish mob, but this is gotta be the most stand up gangster I've ever heard.... God bless you and your family....
I’d like to see a video related to animals. Maybe how crime works for animal smuggling (exotic/invasive species as pets) or something like that. Just something with animals.
@@mrdeafa25 why is it weird? Animal smuggling is a legitimate crime that actively happens. Or is it weird that I like content based on animals? Either way you can mind your business or stfu. Those are your options.
@@mithridateseupator3492 These people aren't too smart you see. They have 0 idea how ethnicity works. Also in America there actually is more to the old culture in Irish/Scottish than in those modern countries. IF only there was a platform like say UA-cam where modern Scottish and Irish go over this. These people like OP are unintelligent.
As an Irishman who is actually FROM Ireland, the way "Irish" culture has developed in Boston and the wider US is so bizarre to us. I mean theres nothing wrong at all about being proud of your heritage. The problem is the heritage they base it all on is so over exaggerated and contains so much misrepresentation of actual Irish culture.
Red was only 24 years old when he got pinched. Look at the others guys ages compared to Red. These other guys were 43,50,53,50,44 years old. He was half their ages and running the crew he had
He wasn’t running any real “crew” like the Italian mafia does with their captains. He was just a coke dealer that had to pay Whitey like all the rest. He had a few other coke head friends selling some coke with him but it was far from a real mob crew.
Then you know that red shea was more of a fan of whitey. Whitey talked to him through weeks. He wouldnt shut up one of the detective said it red shea got himself caught. He wouldnt shut up
My uncle left his wife and kids and disappeared. He eventually came back, but he said he got in over his head. He was dangling people into furnaces. He was threatening to kill people. He'd been stabbed, shot. He was doing bad things and he couldn't do it anymore. He became a pastor.
Thats how they really operate, they exploit the vulnerable, they prey on small family bussiness and they take advantage of young talents. The movies are good, its fascinating lives, but we shouldnt glorify them.
@@wille1811 I wish other people would see them for exactly what they are. Not only taking off of the little family business but then dealing drugs to the children of those families and getting rich by poisoning them. Stupid people look up to them.
It’s a stereotype Irish people drink a lot. And like a lot of stereotypes it’s not actually based in reality you know? Irish people drink less than a lot of their European neighbours going by most studies…Brits for example binge drink a lot more to extreme in my experience.
"i started going on vacation to nice places, like Florida and Montreal..."😅 Definitely blue collar Boston. When you go skiing you, were the ones wearing jeans and the bright safety orange jackets from the construction site. *A lot of people from that area owe a lot to Mark.
@@HOSTISHUMANIGENERIS-b7f I think he's saying that white people, irish or not, don't want to be associated with black people. "yudigg7", is a black person trying to extend a hair thin connection to irish americans based on historical circumstance alone because he and other black people have no pride and are unable to improve the quality of their own lives, you dig? black people will say that they are irish, hebrew, egyptian, muslim, and anything but black.
John "Red" Shea was born in Boston, Massachusetts, and neither he nor his parents were born in Ireland. While often referred to as Irish-American due to his heritage, Shea is an American criminal with no direct connection to Ireland. His involvement in organized crime, particularly with Whitey Bulger's Winter Hill Gang, is entirely based in the U.S..
@@GaryHynes-io9yzit isn’t Irish though. His heritage, like most Irish Americans, is American. There’s some distant memory of something Irish in there, but it’s really not Irish.
My grandfather came to NYC from Sligo Ire in 1924 after having to leave to avoid arrest for his IRA activities. He worked in the meatpacking industry and did some side jobs for the Columbo family. I never really met him. He died on the inside in 1967. All four of his sons were fostered by family members who lived in the NYC area and later they all received advanced degrees resulting in successful careers. The Irish Immigration story.
This guy served 12 years in prison for following a code no one else adhered to, and considers it his crowning achievement. This is the employee bosses dream about.
You don't want to get fired from the mob
Yeah they offer "matching" but its in the form of other cadavers beside you, its not the 401k or pension you'd like.
You've no idea about honor.
Billy, do you even hear yourself.
Let me open your eyes snd show you what youre being an apologist (verbal defender) of....
You perform illegal activities in a location that is "claimed" by a local crime figure, and that claim is by their own assettion, they dont have deeds to 90% of the area they are claiming.
They expect you to take the proceeds from that illegal activity and kick up 10 to 25% of it to a person that didnt help plan it, took none of the risk, and the ONLY reason you do it is because if you continue doing it without paying, they will get another guy who does illegal stuff to come remove you and leave your own biological family destitute.
Then on top of that, the local crime figure at some point will be not smart and bring another not smart person into the organization, and they will attract the attention of the authorities, and to avoid a sentence, they will flip and provide evidence against YOU.
And it was all because they got greedy and chose money over being smart, and being protective of the people already working for them.
Now you want to assert that there is 'honor' in any of that.
So again, do you hear yourself. I mean you tell other people they don't know anything but youre the one who can't seem to recognize a (bleep) deal that is.
Honor is the religion they sell you into accepting it.
@@billynwa7418 there is no honour in crime.
Gangsters are glorified in movies but the reality is they’re scumbags.
Civilians are Scumbags too
Well duh, I don't think anyone is going to theaters to watch movies about accountants and engineers. Movies about dangerous thugs is what sells especially about the Mafia
Politicians are scumbags too 😂 In fact, entrepreneurs are scumbags as well (thinking about Jeff Bezos)
@@AmyPieterse bad example
@@larcm3only for eejits watching them.
His main business was fear. Forcing business owners into paying a "protection" fee. If they didn't pay, they were tortured, killed or had their businesses burned down. Innocent people just trying to feed their families.
Yes and he is absurd for claiming to be a standup guy… Based only on his refusal to testify against other vile criminals, which would have helped society by reducing crime.
He also shows very little remorse for all of the evil that he did. Saying he would have chosen boxing in retrospect is not remorse in and of itself. it sounds like the main reason he would have chosen boxing in retrospect is because it would have prevented him from being in jail for a dozen years. But he doesn’t show hardly any remorse for being involved in killing and maiming people, getting lots of people addicted to drugs, stealing from many people, terrorizing his own community and the stabilizing society in general. How casually and unemotionally he talks about all of those evil things and kind of justifies it… Reminds me of the famous saying about the banality of evil.
Thats how the world works and always has worked dog eat dog you think people become multi millionaires by caring for other peoples feelings and emotions or about their quality of life our whole government is a mafia go judge them they’ve done it on a way bigger scale than these guys
@@DailySourceHe’s clearly a sociopath. You can tell just by watching him speak that he’s done murders. There’s no way this guy hasn’t killed people.
All of the above comments, I couldn’t agree with more. I’m surprised that there aren’t the usual counterpoint comments arguing in favor of this man’s chosen lifestyle. There are a lot of people out there who defend and justify that life. The vast majority of them knowing what they know from glamorized movies and a dose of their own dysfunctional reality.
Mentioning nice vacations as Florida or Montreal is such a Massachusetts things to say… love it.
Montreal is such a funny place to brag about vacationing too, because they speak French I’m guessing he felt like he was in Paris lol
They don’t speak real French lol, they speak a bastardized version of it, lol so funny to hear a Quebecer say they are French, no you are a wannabe
Too True!!.😊
@@nervesinapattern7261 ngl Im from the Boston Area and Quebec City (particularly the old city section) reminds me of Europe. It’ awesome
@@bmledoux Same, Montreal and Quebec do remind me a lot of Europe, love the old architecture and they’re also basically the only cities in Canada with pedestrian streets within the city centre.
"I can't let someone steal from me, because then everyone else will. I have to send a message" says the guy who robbed places many times. It's like one of those guys who tailgates all the time but gets upset the moment someone tailgates him.
Ha! I thought at first you were talking about having a picnic out of the back of a truck at the game...
Bullies are the first to play victim
Is there a point?
@@JakeGittes84you missed the point /whoosh
@@lividbutton2813 yucky redditor response
This guy is soo proud of how loyal he was to Whitey, but Whitey was ratting him out the entire time.
They're all a bunch of knuckleheads.
A lot of people went through the samething with other Irish and Italian mobsters in the city/region. You’d be surprised how many people have grandfathers who worked for Whitey or his competition.
That’s true Whitey was a fed ci .
The reality of being in a gang or a mafia - is that you are FAR far more likely to be taken out by one of your fellow brothers, then your actual opposition .
this is of course, because of the insulation factor. When a mobster is sentenced to death- his executioner is generally someone he see’s every day.
A stranger would put people on high guard .
Exactly
Not the brightest star in the sky
I live in Southie, have family that was involved in all of this, crazy how brain washed they all are/were... I still hear people say "man I wish Whitey was still around, things were so much better" It's fucked up
A mobster that is in the union and does concrete work, never saw that coming.
welcome to boston man
Mmm
Working class came from the trenches . You wouldnt know ?
It’s sarcasm, kids
@@JTD472 its hard to tell these days. People are more uninformed and misinformed than ever.
1978 my dad had a 'crane operator' on his payroll at the docks.
That guy made 150k and would showup to work one day a week.
He was a mob plant and having him on the books was the price to do business at the docks.
$150K in 1978?!!!! That’s absolutely insane. The inflation calc says that is worth $755,510 in 2024. Did your father’s business ever benefit from his presence? Like did the mafia ever provide contacts or contracts to him in exchange for the job, or was it simply to keep them pacified and avoid violence?
Because it isnt true
@@Zshay1000 IIRC having him around pacified 'ongoing labor disputes' aka pay the extortion or the union goes on strike.
That used to be standard at most big construction sites all over the Nrotheast
My dad was vice president of a steel company, and he has many stories dealing with the mob/unions in the 60’s and 70’s.
As usual these interviews blow my mind. "I didn't want to water down coke because I wanted to provide better customer experience" 🤣bruh
I think you might be surprised about the realities of let's just say these nuances
because he understands that to be a form of beating that would bring about "circumstances"
of course, he still did it because daddy told him to.
professionals have standards
It's a business, legal or illegal.
@@bjkarana 100 percent
"And if somebody does do that, there should be... circumstances. Absolutely!" Lol, that's a great quote. "There should be circumstances!"
Not the sharpest knife in the drawer...
CONSEQUENCES!!!
I honestly laughed out loud when he said that 😂 It's like something out of the sopranos. Think he meant to say consequences
Reminded me of the Sopranos when Little Carmine says “the sacred and the propane”.
This is the comment I was looking for 😅😂 LOL
I was not expecting an "Alec Baldwin is a dick" story when I started the video.
Everyone has one or gets one
Alec drunkie the clown Baldwin?
Yea didn expect it but not suprised, hes still is a dick
Well he is a murderer....
@@CrazyMonkey679that was an accident and I genuinely feel bad for Alec on that one. He still is a douche
I really enjoyed this interview and you can tell this guy is the real deal and lived that life. Insider does a nice job with these types of organized crime interviews. It has to be hard knowing you were a stand up guy who did their years of prison time for an organization where the boss was an informant.
@@STONESGAM " stand up guy ?!" Lol.
Trust me as much as I whitey wasn't liked, whitey didnt even talk to him directly. He spoke through Kevin weeks. He use to come off as a fan
@@natashab3412it's a figure of speech, we all know wgwt hes meaning.
@@DMWBN3 " really enjoyed " " real deal " " nice job " " hard knowing " " stand up guy " too many positive figures of speach for my liking ..they are scum of the earth . Dont glorify them.
The boss may have been an informant. But this one cosigned it all & in his words "felt nothing " in re to any of the murders .
He comes off as a pick me fanboy, who shouldnt have " stood up" .
Imo
@@natashab3412 Okay, I apologize for watching and enjoying this video. I will check with you first before commenting in the future until I get your okay about what is acceptable.
Definitely one of the best episodes
Except nobody is Irish lol. This guy is clearly American
Nice job on this documentary. I didn't know anything about the topic, yet the story kept me to the end.
People:"Get the car keys"
Boston: "Get the khakis"
Boston: Give me the beer can
Jamaican: Give me the bacon
@@Snyder9e 🤣🤣🤣
Get in da cah!
Crime Lawd
@@Snyder9e
Boston: give me the soap
Jamaican: me nah use it
@@Snyder9ethis also works with Yorkshire accent in place of Boston lol
This was a great listen. I never heard of John Shea. So a fresh perspective on Whitey and winter hill was awesome
Check out his book Rat Bastars. Incredible!
That’s something I could never figure out. LCN guys wearing $3k suits, all driving Caddy’s and Lincoln’s, right in the face of the feds. Jimmy drove a Malibu, and wore casual slacks, sport shirts, and a light jacket. If you passed him on the street, you’d never suspect he was the biggest gangster in Boston. You don’t flaunt anything. Man that’s rule #1. On the street, or in the can, be the quietest guy in the room.
Money talks, wealth whispers
They're fools bring attention on to themselves. The likes of Joe Bonanno, Gambino, accardo etc all dressed casually and they are top of the food chain as far as the Italians went.
Dressing up was all well and good before the days of the taxman asking for a receipt, but only a fool would rub it into the guys who are carrying out surveillance on them.
Because that's a red herring. At some point all the gangsters figured out the IRS made doing that pointless.
See eventually the IRS just looks at a guy, living even a humble middle class lifestyle and starts asking "wait, how is this guy even surviving? He has NO income stream. This guy has a car, how? He doesn't have a job! His family seems to all being doing well, and none of them have jobs? This guy's living in an ok-ish apartment, with NO taxable money coming in! Investigate him pronto."
At that point you figure being 'humble' is pointless. You'd have to literally live in squalor to not actually alert the IRS. At that point you figure " F being humble, we have to focus on having legitimate businesses as fronts and launder money, then we can have our cake and eat it too!"
Calm down Al Capone...
@@earhearthush-up5549I mean 8/10 any street dude will have a job and need one too start out
I sort of admire his reason for not snitching. He said I'm a man and can do the time for my decisions and not put the burden of my decisions on others.
The Yale University sweatshirt on Kevin Weeks is priceless
What a betrayal of Haa'vad lol.
It's like the picture of Pablo Escobar and his son at the White House haha
@@matthew92604 Actually worse people than Don Pablo are currently residing at the white house. Also before many war criminals accountable for hundreds of thousands if not millions were residents of the white house.
Two of his brothers went to harvard@@zulfikaregzikutor5561
eh
Lol the sister takes him to box so he can protect himself and he ends up working for drug dealers because of it 😂
Thanks sis
Made him a mobster unknowingly.😂
"The Irish, they had some great clothing..."
Even while calling out the Italians for getting dressed up he felt the need to point out that the Irish dressed well too.
so silly.
@@gibbsmYet NOT one as ever been to Ireland 🙄
They couldn’t dress for nothing
@@glenndouglas8822so what? Irish is an ethnicity. Irishness has an ethnic component whether you like it or not
Guy doesn’t even know what nationality he is, thinks he’s Irish
Great interview. I have read all the irish mob books, watched the movies and docs. Fascinating stories.
The Irishman is pretty good if you haven’t watched it it’s worth it
Could you name your own top 3 favorite movies?
this was a great, realistic interview. no bs, no glorification.
There was some glorification including his claim to be a standup guy for refusing to testify against vile, dangerous criminals, which would have helped society by reducing crime.
@@DailySource that would be a death sentence though.. Nobody would do that
24.40-Definitely glorification
I can basically relate to the scenario where he grew up, but in another state, during the sixties and seventies.
A place known as housing projects, but today, mostly occupied by blacks and other people. Where I grew up was a large Irish presence and also others, such as Italians, Polish, etc. Basically, all blue collar workers, single mothers, disabled veterans, etc.
Most of these projects were built during WW2, to provide affordable housing for the workers of nearby industries and such to support the war effort. After the war, most of the housing remained and were managed by local towns and communities.
To this day, I can honestly say, that environment was truly a blessing. It was a place where everyone knew you and it was like a huge family. The most down to earth place of great caring people, that had your back. Was there possibly nefarious stuff going on there? Of course, just as it does today, in all levels of society. If anyone can't believe that, then they are totally blind.
If I had to live my life over again, I would certainly select that place to begin again. The reason being, it teaches you respect, to help one another, and sometimes the real raw truths of what the important things in life are.
Do one going into Canadian organised crime. Montreal based families, Asian gangs in Vancouver or bikers. Interesting area
The ports... all the money is in construction and the ports
The mob reporter kills that fam
Vice have a great series on the Canadian Hell's Angels and the Montreal families. Hell's Angels: Kingdom Come
Look up Hood Chronicles
.......? ಠಿ_ಠ
Did I just watch a former crime Boss give a coherent, respectful interview without cursing ONE TIME?!? 😲 I must have a fever.
Yes u just did. His use of big words too: "Susceptible" "inconspicuous"- must be a "voracious" reader😊
He's Irish, not a greaseball
You live a sheltered life 😂
Michael Franzese has a very popular UA-cam channel as well.
"If you will" was said 316 times instead.
This is incredibly informative
Worked as Correctional Officer in Oklahoma. The Irish mob guys were respectful to us as long as we were respectful to them. Despite the differences we had they always had the most respect and organization on the pods.
In Oklahoma? Guessing it was a federal prison then, otherwise IDK if there's a single Irish person in Oklahoma. I could be wrong, IDK. Either way, I imagine of all the white gangs the Irish mobsters were not very well represented, which may also have contributed to them being low profile in jail. Even the Italian Mafia, there's some guys there but it's almost like the less organized you are going into prison the better. It all really boils down to skin color anyway from what I understand.
@@voteZDLR No, the gang in OK is a bunch of white trash wiggaaaah types. They aren't affiliated with Ireland or the Boston guys. At least, I have seen no indication they are...
My dad hung at the leedsville, but he died when I was kid. He brought me there alot, but the little club upstairs was off limits, never got a chance to ask him why.
Great interview. I've become obsessed with this series. I would love to see one about organized retail crime!!!!!
I grew up in southie, left to join the military in the mid 80s, Triple O's was notorious for IRA recruiting
How's it goin Mark, I'm over here in Ireland. That's interesting about that pub being a recruitment hub.
IRA recruiting? I doubt that very much. The organization almost exclusively operated in the UK and the Republic of Ireland. It had its alliances and connections in other countries, sure, but members of the organization living in other countries were almost always born and raised Irishmen.
Volunteers dony usually work on that side of the pond, they operate here in Ireland. Dony make much sense to recruit Americans, I've never met an American volunteer either....... But obviously I dony know every volunteer so I could be talking out me arsh 😂
@@whittysworkshop982 John Crawley is a yank who joined up with the ra. Don't know if he's from Boston tho.
@@whittysworkshop982lots of money and weapons came from America the bar hes talking about was associated with bulger who supported the ira and was caught sending guns over so recruiting is probably the wrong word but there was lots of fundraising and sponsorship requests
I hate gangs, but he s the kind that I can at least relate to,
no theater, no drama, just the straight facts, all business, cold.
he leaves no guesses, draws the lines very clearly.
also why I d trust him being honest now,
a strong character, he does what he says, try to stop him...
inspiring type in any field I ll say.
good show bro
One of the best interviews I’ve seen. This guy needs a movie about his life.
I’m the home care nurse who cared for the elderly mobsters who lived in modest homes with high end furniture, the best dishes, etc. I never asked they never talked but their names are familiar from growing up North of Boston. Some scared the living daylights out of me…dead fish eyes following me. Others, if I didn’t know WHO they were by reputation, I would never know they were mobbed up. Mostly, the Mafia and WHG guys. I shake my head at how casual we were about this back in the 70’s. If you didn’t get into their business you were fairly safe.
I grew up on D street in Southie and later moved in the 80s to Palm Beach Florida. My dad had a "no show" job plus did a lot of Union strike breaking stuff. Basically guys like him get sent to change peoples minds to get them back to work. In Florida he loan sharked and run books. I met a lot of his crew, Mike D, "little" Mike, Butch "the butcher", guys with colorful names. A lot of movies etc glamorize this stuff but as a son of one of these guys it's not glamorous. My father was a Veteran and boxer in the Army. He was a violent man, at home and in general. He'd leave the house at all times of the day and stay gone sometimes. He was always with his crew and we were secondary. New cars, wads of cash in his pocket and arguments with my mother over my fathers side women were the norm. My father had a coldness to him like a shark and you knew he'd killed and hurt people. As a teen I ran away but developed a weird friendship with him. He told me criminal lessons and advice on stuff. I once got arrested because someone said I threatened them with a mini 14. They couldn't find the gun because I had hid it in my fathers yard. The cops on a tip checked my fathers house but couldn't find it. My father after I had been released with no charges, was obviously mad at me for having cops at his house. But he wasn't mad because I got in trouble, he was mad that I didn't give him a heads up that I buried a gun in the yard. Years later I caught a charge in Boston for a fight on the T. I called my father and he talked to me on how I needed to handle myself in jail. In my twenties I was facing Fed time for credit card fraud. Basically buying stuff on the phone with credit card numbers and we'd puck up the stuff. He talked me thru it and kept me from being a rat and not incriminating myself. The charges ended up being dropped because tgey couldn't prove I did a pickup. The point is, that as cool as I thought my dad was back then, I realize now that I'm a dad that I never really had a "father" because he belonged to that life.
Thanks for sharing your story to deglorify the lives of mobsters. While watching this video, I kept thinking that despite this guys Irish charm, he seemed very cold inside.
Sounds like honest, real work that benefitted the lives of many working class people
My dad was just a broke, drunk loser. I envy that you had an actual father.
I've worked with many Irish on Melbourne construction sites. I honestly cannot say a bad word about one, and this is over 25 years. The work ethic, the manners, just everything about the Irish presents good men. I'd confidently say if you see the bad side of an Irishman, it's likely you're the one out of line.
This guy's not Irish though; he's American.
I mean, this guy is admitting to selling cocaine in his community, fraud, extortion and extreme violence. 😂
People are people, it's pretty much agreed upon to never work for an Irish firm
This guy ISN’T IRISH, he’s probably never been to Ireland or even had a proper Guinness, he’s American.
@@tomlewis8522many yanks of Irish decent have done more for Ireland than Irish
No thrill-seeking, no inflated language. Just a sound story.
Agreed 👍💯
But a lot of his “story” is disputed.
These algorithms are scary. I literally just re-watched The Departed
😂😂😂
Well, I mean, this vid is about the departed too, just not quite as naturally.
GET RID OF THE F'IN TAIL
Watch Black Mass if you haven't, johnny depp is so good as Whitey.
Ya it's a Good flic 📽️ 👌🏻☘️@@billydiesel8520
@@billydiesel8520
Thanks! On my que now.
Great interview just letting that man tell his story.
Great interview. Thank you Red
I feel like I'm here too early I usually see these videos after like 5 months or so xd
Lmao underrated comment of all youtube 🎉 your flowers sir
There's no honor in being a mobster. It's a silly club, that happens to be violent and deadly.
Lol be quiet nerd
Honor in everything. And it's not a club!!!
@@laklinka it's a fruity little club. Dickhead has never even been to Ireland.
@@laklinkaYou're right it's not a club, and there's no honor amongst thieves.
That's Hollywood that glorified that image. Corporations today commit crimes that are 100 times worse. No one is interested in the ethics of corporate America.
I’d def read a book on healthy living by the Irish Mob.
Peaked cap. Plenty of whiskey and guiness. Dont take any shite from anyone. -irishman living in the west of Ireland.
LOL
How was Flemmi's health ? Outstanding ??? 🎉😢😅😅
Did White B. Follow Suit ?
Any of those Veg.Juice recipes contain Vodka, Whiskey or Rum ????😊😊😊. & Served at the Bar ?
Excellent job. More please. Very interesting the winter hill & Westies etc
Outstanding! What a great interview.
it's no surprise the people on top usually rat out everyone else. it's usually them that's made the rule purely to save themselves.
Just recently rewatched black mass (highly recommend) and loved this video.
What’s it streaming on?
@@anthonymason4999it was on Netflix UK for a while. Not sure if removed by now though.
@@anthonymason4999 Netflix
@@anthonymason4999 Netflix
@@anthonymason4999Netflix (might be Amazon Prime, but it’s one of the two.)
People: "New York"
Boston: "Nu Yark"
Interesting interview!
I read his book and it is fantastic. Well worth a read
Whitey Bulger film with Johnny Depp was dope. Also, The Departed.
Love The Departed, Dicaprio kills it as does Jack Nicholson as always.
Black Mass
@@vsznry I liked The Town (?) If I'm thinking of the right film, the one with Ben Affleck and they're from Charlestown in Boston and they are one of the many gangs who were carrying out the many cash in transit robberies.
i still have yet to see black mass (i think that's what it's called)
Fun fact: the departed is basically about whitey Bulger but more fictional. Black mass is allot more accurate
Must be rough where he's from. Even his eyebrows got stolen!
Took the lips too 😅
😂😂😂😂😂
Blonde eyebrows can be seen when light hits them j u s t right.
They took the man's Rs!
😂😂😂. I'm off Irish origin born in England. My Grandson is like this fellow. When he was born, he had a ruddy complexion, and Red hair. We jokingly called him the boy with no eyebrows, because they were White, you could hardly see them. 😆
This is FIRE 🍀
Great coverage. Enjoyable to watch!
The second I opened this I said "if he doesn't have a boston accent he's lying"
What if he had an Irish accent?
@@Brandon-nq7ysBostonian are basically American Irish and sound similar but way much clearer to our 👂
🤣🤣🤣
@@jasonthompson4079 I can tell you from having an Irish accent that Americans in general even bostonians sound Nothing like the Irish listen to a guy talk from Boston then listen to real Irish people havin6a talk it sounds nothing alike
My UK ear is hearing a cross between NY and Dublin
@8:10 Rumour has it the Winterhill gang, based in Summerville did their spring cleaning in the autumn.
Zing!
Fun joke except it's spelled Somerville.
lmao same thing when i got raided they said "wheres the guns?" I said "WHAT GUNS I JUST COLLECT BULLETS"
I had a friend from Southie and that accent is unmistakable.
I grew up in big (9 kid) Irish family in Buffalo. My Dad was Customs and DEA. My brothers and I still found trouble here and there. I'm probably lucky to be where I am today.
How many of you went into Law Enforcement?
@@samanthab1923 my 2nd eldest brother became a cop. he was kicked off the force for some indiscretion of which i don't know the full details. the funny thing is they asked him to join because he caught a running suspect by shouting "Freeze, Mother Fucker!" We picked that up from a 70's movie and said it to each other often for fun. He got really good at it. The perp. dove onto the ground and was cuffed.
Do one about Danny Greene the Irish/American mobster in Cleaveland. He was nearly as vicious as Whitey Bulger
One about Mickey Featherstone would be better. Not so known as Danny.
Naw he’s garbage
Danny is a legend! No one except ol man Jimmy can touch Danny's legacy.
Danny was my cousin. No bs.
Oh yeah read and watched Docs on him ..that man was fearless and going toe to toe with the Italians doing what he needed to do..most people would have folded or hid out.DG was Tough
Gazza looking well
😂😂😂
@@Thetavern09you read my mind😂
He kinda looks like Gazza and Alf from home and away mixed together
Omg yeah 😂😂😂😂😂bravo 👌🏼👏👏
@@kiely4561😂😂
Montreal mafia /crime scene would be cool, used to be a heavy Irish mob presence there
Aren't the biker gangs big there also?
@@DetectiveTrupo203 yeah really big there’s some interesting podcasts talking about them actually. There was some huge biker wars back in the day in Montreal. I saw they did a video on the Hells angels already so just kinda thought it’d be cool too here from there perspective
My distant relatives, the Dubois brothers, had a big gang time presence in East Montreal.
Different generation and distant relatives. Never met them. Just connected on the family tree.
Great interview.
Agreed.
Much respect brother , never turn , no matter what, we do our time and pay our debts. Like I said, much respect.
Sold in the BAAArs.
I lived in Boston in 1999-2000. I’ve lived all over the world and Boston is one of my favorite cities. I’m a huge history buff so that city is perfect for that as well. I lived on the Woburn/Stoneham border ,I think it was route 28,which is about 12-15 minutes north of Boston and then I lived in Back Bay with a friend who rented me a room in this beautiful brownstone he had facing MIT. I would hang out at a bar/restaurant called Daisy Buchanan’s which was on Newbury Street. It’s no longer there which is a shame cause I have so many memories there. I ended up dating one of the waitresses/bartender there and we had a great relationship and we still talk to one another to this day 25 years later. I haven’t been back to Boston since 2004 so I need to go back. I’m sure that it’s changed a lot. I was there during the Big Swig,I mean the Big Dig lol in 1999-2000. Im from Phoenix and if it wasn’t so cold there I would definitely live there
It's all a bunch of illegal immigrants, homeless drug attics all over the streets, or rich hipster suburban kids. It's nothing like it was
it has changed a lot, but it's a lot nicer in some places now. definitely come visit again
@@pantshidder like I said I love that town. My buddy Jimmy Gallagher who’s from Dot just recently passed away and I couldn’t go to his funeral which sucked but I’m planning to go back next summer for sure. That’s good that it’s a lot nicer now. I also miss the food in the North End and I use to go to this Pub in Southie that had the best Steak Tips. Man that place was good. I forgot the name of it but I remember that when you go over that little bridge in Southie it’s right there to the right. Boston is an amazing city and I have so many great memories there.
When I first moved to Woburn the company that I worked for got us company housing and I got there at night from the airport and I just went into my room and crashed out. The next morning I look out my window and there was a cemetery right next door. It tripped me out because here in Phoenix we don’t have cemetery’s in residential neighborhoods. I got over pretty quickly because though but it did trip me out
Construction was booming since recession, the Seaport is almost another city within Boston, so many buildings popped up all over the city.
Boston is a great town but changed much since early 2000's. I loved Daisy Buchanan's when i ventured into the city. "04 with the Red Sox finally winning was a great time. Stay well and come back when it's warm!
16 years that's the longest I've ever heard of ANYONE being on the RUN 🏃💨💨💨
Forest Gump?
The Alcatraz escapees come to mind.
Highly informative!
At least this was a more realistic interview ~ Better than most I've seen. Been there done that - And lucky to be alive.😊
Honestly I got nothing but respect for this guy he is keeping it real I’ve been in situations similar in New York I tip my hat my brother
I hear you! ☘️
respect? For a murderer? Who shows very little remorse for the violence?
I enjoyed this interview. Excellent
What about the ties to sports and recruiting of boxers and then football players. How about the ties to New Jersey and Pennsylvania. I keep hearing there's ties into the ownership at major sports teams too. The ties into state legislatures and law enforement from local to national is interesting too.
Check out whitey’s brother
Great story.... Wow !!
I don't follow the Irish mob, but this is gotta be the most stand up gangster I've ever heard.... God bless you and your family....
I’d like to see a video related to animals.
Maybe how crime works for animal smuggling (exotic/invasive species as pets) or something like that. Just something with animals.
Thats just plain weird. Seek help.
@@mrdeafa25 why is it weird? Animal smuggling is a legitimate crime that actively happens. Or is it weird that I like content based on animals? Either way you can mind your business or stfu. Those are your options.
@@JBrotsis1 Yep. Like I said. Weird.
@@mrdeafa25 well good thing your opinion holds no weight to me, so 🤷🏻♂️ idc
Lmgtfy -> Tiger King
This is only half of the irish mob.The other half lives inside the police/C.O unions of the country.Active,organized and zealous
they're not even Irish, by their accents
What are CO unions?
No Irish person calls Ireland "the old country" lol
These Irish Americans aren’t Irish in any way.
@Matt-le5du that is because we are Americans. But we have Irish.
Why would they? It’s a term used by immigrants who have left their country of birth.
@@mithridateseupator3492 These people aren't too smart you see. They have 0 idea how ethnicity works. Also in America there actually is more to the old culture in Irish/Scottish than in those modern countries. IF only there was a platform like say UA-cam where modern Scottish and Irish go over this. These people like OP are unintelligent.
was going to accuse this man of being a "rat" off the cuff, but having watched the full video i'd say this was just informative. nicely done Red.
Excellent... refreshingly honest. Thx
As an Irishman who is actually FROM Ireland, the way "Irish" culture has developed in Boston and the wider US is so bizarre to us.
I mean theres nothing wrong at all about being proud of your heritage. The problem is the heritage they base it all on is so over exaggerated and contains so much misrepresentation of actual Irish culture.
as a nigerian from ireland i am the real irish man not these guys with irish dna
@@tvpc3194 You both aren't Irish but in different ways.
Nice try, let's hear you denounce our "new Irish" as being disingenuous. Oh, yeah.. only White people are denied a heritage.
You cant shake people down if you're drunk lad
It's Gaelic but anyhoo.......
John, my dear and precious friend, you are a man's man and a 100% stand-up guy. I love you, my brother! Little Mikey's dad, and The Boston 9.
Yep. Everybody loves a violent, drug-dealing bully.
Know why you never see these about fight clubs? Exactly.
Whitey is a fascinating character love hearing these stories hope this guy does some podcasts
fantastic video!!
Red was only 24 years old when he got pinched. Look at the others guys ages compared to Red. These other guys were 43,50,53,50,44 years old. He was half their ages and running the crew he had
He wasn’t running any real “crew” like the Italian mafia does with their captains. He was just a coke dealer that had to pay Whitey like all the rest. He had a few other coke head friends selling some coke with him but it was far from a real mob crew.
Then you know that red shea was more of a fan of whitey. Whitey talked to him through weeks. He wouldnt shut up one of the detective said it red shea got himself caught. He wouldnt shut up
My uncle left his wife and kids and disappeared. He eventually came back, but he said he got in over his head. He was dangling people into furnaces. He was threatening to kill people. He'd been stabbed, shot. He was doing bad things and he couldn't do it anymore.
He became a pastor.
Johnny Depp never did gain the plaudits that he deserved for his performance in Black Mass. He literally became Whitey Bulger in that role.
very honest interview.
Red Shea is legit and his book is phenomenal. Worth the read.
This guys tried to extort Dana White when hes just a cardio boxing coach in Boston lol
And Dana ran away with his tail between his legs.
Thats how they really operate, they exploit the vulnerable, they prey on small family bussiness and they take advantage of young talents.
The movies are good, its fascinating lives, but we shouldnt glorify them.
There are guys with Whitey that debunked that. Then again there may be some that wouldn’t & shouldn’t admit it
No he didn't, that was Kevin weeks!
@@wille1811 I wish other people would see them for exactly what they are. Not only taking off of the little family business but then dealing drugs to the children of those families and getting rich by poisoning them. Stupid people look up to them.
It's your cousin for Boston :)
He's still in the game,
"Didn't drink a whole lot," what kind of Irish mob was this!?
It’s a stereotype Irish people drink a lot. And like a lot of stereotypes it’s not actually based in reality you know? Irish people drink less than a lot of their European neighbours going by most studies…Brits for example binge drink a lot more to extreme in my experience.
@OriginalMaxPowerII nowadays, yes, but back then every bar in Belfast and Dublin was packed every day of the week
@@OriginalMaxPowerII I think you missed the verbal irony in my initial comment.
"Drink a lot" is a relative term to an Irishman! We love our beverages, music, good times, friendship & most of all love life!
Gota keep your wits about you
A really fascinating video, thank you.
"i started going on vacation to nice places, like Florida and Montreal..."😅
Definitely blue collar Boston. When you go skiing you, were the ones wearing jeans and the bright safety orange jackets from the construction site.
*A lot of people from that area owe a lot to Mark.
as a black american,i too am irish
The reverse will never be true
Every St. Paddy's day!
@@busterhikney6936
What?
@@HOSTISHUMANIGENERIS-b7f I think he's saying that white people, irish or not, don't want to be associated with black people. "yudigg7", is a black person trying to extend a hair thin connection to irish americans based on historical circumstance alone because he and other black people have no pride and are unable to improve the quality of their own lives, you dig? black people will say that they are irish, hebrew, egyptian, muslim, and anything but black.
We are all irish
John "Red" Shea was born in Boston, Massachusetts, and neither he nor his parents were born in Ireland. While often referred to as Irish-American due to his heritage, Shea is an American criminal with no direct connection to Ireland. His involvement in organized crime, particularly with Whitey Bulger's Winter Hill Gang, is entirely based in the U.S..
Dáithí getting pure thick cause the guy in the video is claiming to be Irish! 😂
I hear ya Dáithí, I hear ya!
Yeah but his heritage is Irish... what is your concern
@@GaryHynes-io9yzit isn’t Irish though. His heritage, like most Irish Americans, is American. There’s some distant memory of something Irish in there, but it’s really not Irish.
@@Matt-le5du so why do English people cling to Anglo Saxon when that was 1500 hundred years ago and they came from Germany...
@@GaryHynes-io9yzthey… don’t?
“Selling drugs at the Bahhhhhs”
Excellent video!
loved this vid, thank you :)
4:42 I how he lists the marijuana business as different than the drug business
My grandfather came to NYC from Sligo Ire in 1924 after having to leave to avoid arrest for his IRA activities. He worked in the meatpacking industry and did some side jobs for the Columbo family. I never really met him. He died on the inside in 1967. All four of his sons were fostered by family members who lived in the NYC area and later they all received advanced degrees resulting in successful careers. The Irish Immigration story.