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To Congressman Lewis
US Congressman Ron Lewis
1002 Center Street Suite 300
Bowling Green, KY 42101
Dear Congressman Lewis,
I am a new Kentuckian to your district having moved here from Massachusetts two years ago.
I am a registered nurse employed at The Medical Center and feel compelled to write you after
reading your Committee on Government Reform report entitled, "Everything Secret Degenerates:
The FBI's Use of Murderers As Informants." You and your fellow Committee members are to be
commended for bringing to light what was going on. It took a great deal of courage, tenacity, and
perseverance to root out the ugly truth of corruption; and all the more laudable considering obstacles
you encountered. Please know that your efforts mattered. They mattered for everyone but perhaps
most poignantly for "the little guy." The corruption occurring within the FBI, judiciary, and law
enforcement was a pox on them all, and it created significant repercussions for ordinary citizens
— not just the big well-known cases in the headlines.
One such "ordinary citizen" was Joseph F. Labriola. He was having lunch one day in a
restaurant and was arrested for the murder of a Massachusetts informant. Unfortunately
for him, he had the same name as a Massachusetts mob associate and was indicted by
Grand Jury testimony given solely by Detective William Bergin of the Massachusetts
State Police (the same William Bergin documented in your Committee Report). He was
subsequently convicted of murdering the informant based on "hitman" lingo used at trial
by Detective Bergin, despite the fact the Joseph Labriola had no criminal record
whatsoever. The trial judge instructed the jury that there was "no direct evidence," yet he
was sentenced to life at hard labor without the possibility of parole, and he was sent to the
infamous Walpole State Prison. Appeals were later denied by none other than Edward
Harrington, an individual also featured prominently in your Committee Report.
Yes, emphatically, the corruption in Massachusetts and beyond affected people. I wanted you to know
about someone who was not in your Report and who is still struggling to be exonerated for a crime he
did not commit. In addition to being an "ordinary citizen," Joseph F. Labriola was a Marine. This is
where the outrage is particularly egregious and despicable, and it underscores the depths that Bergin,
Harrington, and others went to. Because, to a Marine, honor is everything. It is a code; a duty; a way
of living. Joseph F. Labriola was also Sergeant Labriola who served in combat in Vietnam and was awarded
the Bronze Star with combat "V" and Purple Heart for heroism. That is a fact, though he will tell you he
is no hero. He served, fought, and bled for our country (with so many others). Yet, how ironic and
unjust that he is not able to experience any of the freedoms he was willing to give his very life for.
I can't tell you how wrong this is, Mr. Lewis, on so many levels. I wanted to tell you also that Sgt.
Labriola was also an expert marksman who trained snipers at Quantico, including Carlos
Hathcock (of whom you must know). Sgt Labriola was the youngest Marine recruiter in Massachusetts.
Your colleague, Hon. John F. Tierney, et al expressed the following Minority view in the
Report: "More thorough inquiry should have been made on behalf of the Committee
about the relationship between the FBI, informants, and members of the members' families,
and about whether those relationships impacted investigations outside the scope of Patriarca,
Barboza, Flemmi, or "Whitey" Bulger's activities. To wit I will nod and respond that your Committee
cannot inquire as to relationships it does not know about. My sole purpose in writing is to let you
know of a decorated Marine who is being held prisoner in Massachusetts since 1973 for a crime he did
not do. I am absolutely convinced that factors outlined in your report directly impacted his arrest
and conviction, and I am working, with others, to seek a commutation of his sentence on actual
innocence and humanitarian grounds (urgent medical necessity).
If you would like to learn more about Sgt Labriola and his situation, I invite you to visit his website
at www.freejoelab.com. And if you are compelled to get additional information, you may contact me.
I just want to reiterate and stress that your efforts have mattered and I thank you. Your report
validates that what happened was wrong and that corrupt individuals did impact others to further their
own agendas. In no small way they impacted a combat Marine who was left behind not in the rice
paddies but in a Massachusetts prison. Shame on them.
Please keep us in your prayers.
Respectfully submitted,
Barbara Beattie
152 Journey Drive
Bowling Green, KY 42104
Enclosures
cc: Members, Committee on Government Reform
July 6, 2008
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