Mark L. Wolf

Mark Lawrence Wolf (born November 23, 1946) is a Senior United States District Judge for the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts.

President Ronald Reagan nominated Wolf on March 8, 1985, to a new seat created by 98 Stat. 333. He was confirmed by the United States Senate on April 3, 1985, and received his commission on April 4, 1985. Wolf served as chief judge for the District Court for the District of Massachusetts from 2006 to 2012. He took senior status on January 1, 2013. He also plans to broaden his work to teach law and give seminars in other countries on the judicial system and combating public corruption, as he has in recent years, in Slovakia, Turkey, and Romania.[1]

Early life and education

Wolf was born in Boston, Massachusetts. He received a B.A. from Yale University in 1968 and a J.D. from Harvard Law School in 1971. He was in the United States Army Reserve from 1969 to 1975. Wolf is Jewish.[2]

Career

Wolf was in private practice in Washington, D.C., from 1971 to 1974. He was a Special Assistant to U.S. Deputy Attorney General Laurence Silberman from 1974 to 1975, and a Special Assistant to U.S. Attorney General Edward Levi from 1975 to 1977. He was again in private practice, this time in Boston, Massachusetts, from 1977 to 1981. He was appointed a Deputy U.S. Attorney and was chief of the Public Corruption Unit from 1981 to 1985. Wolf was a fellow at Harvard Law School from 1989 to 1990 and a lecturer at Boston College Law School in 1992.

Cases

'Whitey' Bulger, Stephen "the Rifleman" Flemmi, and FBI Corruption

In 1998, Wolf held a 10-month hearing on the F.B.I.’s failure to tell the United States attorney in Boston that Whitey Bulger and Stephen (the Rifleman) Flemmi, some of the most prominent mobsters in the US were their informants against organized crime. This resulted in the issuing of a 661-page opinion by Mark Wolf, chief judge of the Federal District Court in Massachusetts.[3]

This demonstrated that John Connolly Jr., the F.B.I. agent assigned to handle them, had protected Bulger, a 15-year informant, and Flemmi, a 25-year informant, as they committed murder and conspired with the Mafia, in exchange for leads about the Mafia. It was Connolly who tipped off Bulger that he was about to be indicted and sent him fleeing as a fugitive. Wolf testified against the F.B.I. agent at a 2002 trial in front of another judge. Connolly was sentenced to 10 years for racketeering, obstruction of justice and making false statements to investigators.

From his investigation, Wolf also concluded that the government couldn’t use crucial evidence against Flemmi that it had gathered through wiretaps against other mobsters because it had granted him partial immunity. The United States Court of Appeals for the First Circuit, in Boston, overturned that part of the judge’s ruling, holding that only prosecutors and not the F.B.I. could grant immunity.

The Wolf opinion is famous in the world of criminal justice. It led to high-profile hearings in Congress on “The F.B.I.’s Use of Murderers as Informants.”[4][5]

United States of America v. Salvatore F. DiMasi and Richard W. McDonough

According to The Boston Globe, "DiMasi and three of his close friends and associates are the subjects of the Ethics Commission probe and other investigations relating to large payments the associates received from Cognos ULC..." an IBM owned company based in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, with a United States headquarters in Burlington, Massachusetts. The Globe also said that "One of the associates, Richard Vitale, DiMasi's accountant, also accepted payments from ticket brokers who were seeking to gut state antiscalping laws." The contracts in question, a $4.5 million contract for the State Board of Education and a $13 million contract for the State Information Technology division, were rescinded after the alleged Ethics violations came to light. IBM, which did not own Cognos at the time of the alleged payoffs, has refunded all paid monies. On December 17, 2008, the Boston Globe confirmed a Federal Grand Jury probe had been launched investigating the charges.On September 9, 2011, DiMasi was sentenced to eight years in federal prison by U.S. District Court Judge Mark Lawrence Wolf and ordered to pay a fine of $65,000. Salvatore F. DiMasi#Corruption case[6]

Kosilek v. Spencer

Wolf ordered that the Massachusetts Department of Corrections must provide Michelle Kosilek (a transgender woman who is imprisoned for the murder of Kosilek's wife) with sex reassignment surgery, which the DOC's medical personnel have determined is medically necessary, as a treatment in connection to Kosilek's gender dysphoria.[7][8] In his ruling, Wolf wrote, "[The] fact that sex reassignment surgery is for some people medically necessary has recently become more widely recognized."

References

Legal offices
Preceded by
new seat
Judge of the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts
1985–2013
Succeeded by
Indira Talwani
Preceded by
William G. Young
Chief Judge of the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts
2006–2012
Succeeded by
Patti B. Saris
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