Crime | Whitey Bulger Whitey Bulger: An Innocent Man Is Behind Bars Boston hit man urges 'real killer' to step forward By Neal Colgrass Posted Apr 7, 2014 5:05 PM CDT Copied In this July 22, 2003 photo, Fred Weichel, serving a life sentence for murder, sits in Middlesex Superior Court in Cambridge, Mass., during a hearing to request a new trial based on a new evidence. (AP Photo/Julia Malakie, File) Notorious Boston hit man James "Whitey" Bulger has adopted an unlikely cause: exonerating a man in prison for murder, the Boston Globe reports. Fred Weichel, a South Boston man behind bars for 32 years, has long claimed he never committed murder in 1980. He even got a new trial in 2004 on the basis of a 1982 letter apparently by an old pal, Thomas Barrett, confessing to the crime. But the trial was tossed out because Weichel had held back the letter too long. Ironically, Weichel claimed he did so because Bulger had warned him not to reveal Barrett's guilt. Now Bulger, 84, serving two life sentences for multiple murders, has written a Weichel supporter that the real killer should "be brave enough to come forth." Bulger doesn't name names, but says that years ago, a Weichel "pal" sought Bulger's advice after badly beating a man and receiving threats from the man's friend, Robert LaMonica. Bulger advised him to kill LaMonica and "never repeat this conversation to anyone." Well, LaMonica got killed, and a teenager's eyewitness testimony pinned the killing on Weichel. Now Weichel's attorney believes that "pal" to be Thomas Barrett. "Bulger is encouraging Barrett to come forward because Weichel is innocent," the attorney told the Boston Herald. Read These Next Sarah Ferguson said she cut off Epstein. Not quite, emails show. The voice behind 'Joy to the World' has died at 83. Trump signs bill to end the latest government shutdown. Turning Point reveals lineup for its alternative halftime show. Report an error