Bull Durham Retires His Connecticut Law Enforcement Horns

Hartford Courant caption: John Durham, left, talks with Robert Devlin, the senior state appellate judge who used to be his strike force partner, at a celebration Friday in honor of Durham’s retirement. (PHOTO: U.S. Attorney’s office)

Corrupt pols, crooked FBI agents, violent drug gangs, mobsters, tramps, thieves, demagogues, assassins: John Durham was the prosecutor defense attorneys didn’t want probing their targeted clients.

At 70, he’s decided to hang up his law enforcement horns that gored a whole bunch of bad guys here, there and everywhere.

In his early state and federal law enforcement career, John Durham spent a lot of time in Bridgeport. As a young reporter I covered many of his investigations. About 30 years ago I was the publisher of a community weekly The Bridgeport Light with a talented group of scribes including OIB friend Bob Fredericks who recently retired as a senior reporter for the New York Post. We wrote regularly about desperadoes who loved dumping on Bridgeport that amassed mountain ranges of debris across the city landscape. Nothing like a good public shaming to clean it up.

With some it stung. A reporter for another news organization overheard in a restaurant the offended dumper promising a bomb into The Light’s newsroom. Blowing smoke, right? Who wanted to take the chance.

I called Durham who notified the guy’s lawyer: if anything happens, guess what?

The Hartford Courant’s Ed Mahony provides a nice overview of Durham’s extraordinary career.

U.S Attorney John H. Durham, who built an extraordinary record over more than four decades as a Connecticut prosecutor, is leaving office this weekend, part of President Joe Biden’s plan to quickly replace top federal prosecutors around the country with his own appointees.

Durham has played a leading role in some of the most compelling criminal and political cases in Connecticut and elsewhere in the country since the 1970s and his departure has judges, lawyers and law enforcement officers of all stripes reflecting on his contributions to the state’s criminal justice system and his absence going forward.

… As a mob prosecutor, Durham, now 70, convicted the leadership of the Patriarca crime family, then New England’s most powerful criminal outfit, riveting mob watchers across the country by playing for a Hartford jury–the first time anywhere, ever in public–a recording of notorious gangsters munching on prosciutto while new inductees burned images of the crime family’s patron saint during the mafia’s secret initiation ceremony.

… He was an architect of the federal law enforcement strategy–still in use–that made Connecticut a national leader in reducing the drug violence that had left bodies in the streets of cities in Connecticut and elsewhere in the 1990s. He supervised the convictions of a long line of corrupt politicians–among them, a pedophile mayor, a state treasurer and a governor–twice. And he was assigned by successive U.S. attorneys general of both parties to investigate gangster James “Whitey” Bulger’s hold on law enforcement in Boston, the CIA’s post-911 interrogation tactics and the origins of the Trump-Russia collusion allegations–a matter in which he remains involved.

Full story here.

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9 comments

  1. Here’s the latest on Vazzano.
    Seems that the labor department is taking a look at him. Don’t see any pay checks for the young woman or the two illegal aliens involved in the case. Didn’t file I-9’s for either one. With the number of restaurants he owned this could only be the tip of the iceberg.
    Maybe they were ready to run the cheek with the first allegation but now it is getting much more problematic.

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    1. I read that article earlier.I find it hard to believe that Vazzano would chance hindering a sexual assault investigation,knowing it’s a potential felony, just because he has some employees working under the table& undocumented.Walk into any restaurant and I would bet you’d find waitresses,cooks,busboys etc,working under the table and lacking documentation.He would have ended up with a fine at most..There has to be more to it..

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        1. Don’t see things getting moved around,Vazzano tried that for a year,that’s why he’s in the position he’s in now.More & more information is coming out,and I haven’t read that any of his “friends” have come out in support so far..

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        2. Hey Mackey, are you saying that the reason State Senator Marylin Moore has NOT been investigated regarding serious irregularities with the tax filing and finances of the Witness Project is due to her powerful friends in high places? That explains why the complaint I filed with the Connecticut Department of Consumer Protection seems to have disappeared from their internal mail system. She learned of the complaint before and immediately after I filed it, right here on OIB.

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          1. Joel, I’m sure that Joe and Mario will reward you for your efforts against Marylin Moore besides a pat on the back.

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          2. Come on Ron, a $300 fine is like a pat on the back or back pocket. You don’t believe she has that many friends in high places do you? The complaint didn’t disappear. It has a file #2019-78, I believe. Mario and Joe have nothing to do with the activities that took place at the Marilyn Moore headquarters in 2019. That was all between Moore, Baracka and her campaign Attorney. The attorney was spared because he wasn’t on video. But the documents tells the story.

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    2. Bob, state investigators found a $500 check made out to the employee arrested so far. It was for 2 days of extra work paid out days before he was arrested. It turns out according to the Hartford Courant that the victims father is a detective for BPD. Why wasn’t the sexual assault investigation turned over to the state? No concern for conflict of interest or the appearance thereof?

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