Convicted ex-Mass State Police Sgt. Gary Cederquist reports to prison where Whitey Bulger was killed

A former statie who was convicted in the driver’s license bribery scheme has officially started his federal sentence at the prison where Whitey Bulger was murdered.

Disgraced ex-Mass State Police Sgt. Gary Cederquist — the “ringleader” of the scheme — has reported to USP Hazelton in West Virginia, according to the Federal Bureau of Prisons.

The Massachusetts federal judge in his case had ordered Cederquist to report to prison by Wednesday.

The 60-year-old South Shore man was sentenced last year to six years in prison, followed by two years of supervised release. He was also ordered to pay a $30,000 fine and $18,300 in restitution.

Cederquist — whose annual State Police base pay was near $150,000, and who took home more than $330,000 in total pay in 2022 — was found guilty of 48 counts in connection with the Commercial Driver’s License bribery scandal.

He faced dozens of charges for falsifying records and giving passing scores to CDL applicants, including people who failed or did not take the CDL skills test, in exchange for bribes.

USP Hazelton is a high-security penitentiary, with an adjacent minimum security satellite camp, according to the Federal Bureau of Prisons. There are 1,527 total inmates at the facility.

Back in 2018, Bulger was killed by other Hazelton inmates shortly after the notorious Boston gangster arrived at the prison. The 89-year-old man was beaten to death in his cell.

Whitey Bulger was killed by other Hazelton inmates in 2018. (U.S. Marshals Service via AP, File)

The three men charged in his killing — Fotios “Freddy” Geas, Paul J. DeCologero and Sean McKinnon — later reached plea deals. Geas, a one-time Mafia hitman, and DeCologero, a Massachusetts gangster, were accused of repeatedly hitting Bulger in the head while McKinnon served as a lookout.

DeCologero told an inmate witness that Bulger was a “snitch” and that as soon as he came into their unit, they planned to kill him. DeCologero also told an inmate that he and Geas used a belt with a lock attached to it to bludgeon Bulger to death, prosecutors said.

Meanwhile, current inmates at USP Hazelton include the former star of a reality TV show James “Tim” Norman, along with ex-Mexican drug lord Juan Garcia-Abrego.

Norman, who was the star of the St. Louis-based reality TV show “Welcome to Sweetie Pie’s,” is facing a life sentence after he was convicted of arranging the shooting death of his nephew.

He hired two people to kill his 21-year-old nephew, then tried to cash a $450,000 life insurance policy taken out on his nephew months earlier.

Garcia-Abrego is also serving life at Hazelton. Back in the 1990s, the FBI placed him on its “Ten Most Wanted Fugitives” list.

According to a federal indictment in Texas, Garcia-Abrego was the leader of a powerful Mexican drug organization responsible for transporting tons of Colombian cocaine into the U.S. for the Cali cartel and for authorizing acts of violence, including murders, to promote drug activities.

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Now, Cederquist will be joining Norman, Garcia-Abrego, and the more than 1,500 other inmates at the facility.

Cederquist was in charge of MSP’s CDL Unit, which is responsible for administering CDL skills tests. The CDL skills test is a demanding, in-person test that consists of three segments: Vehicle Inspection; Basic Control Skills; and the Road Test.

Between February 2019 and January 2023, Cederquist arranged for him and his co-conspirators to give passing scores to at least three dozen applicants regardless of whether or not they had actually passed or, in some cases, had even taken the CDL skills test — including in some instances in exchange for bribes.

Cederquist and his co-conspirators used the code word “golden handshake” or “golden” to identify applicants who received special treatment, and were to be given passing scores on their skills tests regardless of performance.

In text message conversations, Cederquist and his co-conspirators described a number of “golden” applicants as performing poorly on their skills tests. However, all of the applicants received passing scores.

Cederquist also conspired with his friend who worked for a water company that employed drivers who needed CDLs, to give passing scores to certain applicants affiliated with the water company.

In exchange for the passing scores, Cederquist accepted bribes of free inventory from the water company, such as cases of bottled Fiji, VOSS and Essentia water, cases of bottled Arizona Iced Tea, coffee and tea products, and boxes of Twizzlers and Swedish Fish.

Cederquist accepted a variety of bribes including inventory from the water company valued in the thousands of dollars; a $750 granite post and mailbox; a new driveway valued at over $10,000; and a snowblower valued at nearly $2,000. Cederquist described one such applicant as “horrible,” and “brain dead,” but gave him a passing score anyway in exchange for the snowblower.

Herald wire services were used in this report.

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