             United States Court of Appeals
                        For the First Circuit


Nos. 07-1663, 07-1664

    EMILY MCINTYRE, AS ADMINISTRATOR OF THE ESTATE OF JOHN L.
      MCINTYRE; CHRISTOPHER MCINTYRE, IN HIS CAPACITY AS CO-
         ADMINISTRATOR OF THE ESTATE OF JOHN L. MCINTRYE,

                Plaintiffs, Appellees/Cross-Appellants,

                                  v.

                       UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

                 Defendant, Appellant/Cross-Appellee,

   H. PAUL RICO; JOHN MORRIS; JOHN J. CONNOLLY, JR.; RODERICK
 KENNEDY; ROBERT R. FITZPATRICK; JAMES RING; JAMES W. GREENLEAF;
JAMES AHEARN; KEVIN J. WEEKS; JAMES J. BULGER; STEPHEN J. FLEMMI;
 JOHN DOE Number 1-50; FEDERAL BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION; LAWRENCE
 SARHATT; JOHN V. MARTORANO; RICHARD F. BATES; JOSEPH YABLONSKY;
      JAMES F. SCANLON; DENNIS F. CREEDON; THOMAS J. DALY,

                              Defendants.


             APPEALS FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

                   FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

            [Hon. Reginald C. Lindsay, U.S. District Judge]


                                Before

                   Lipez and Howard, Circuit Judges,
                     and Besosa,** District Judge




     *
         Of the District of Puerto Rico, sitting by designation
     Thomas M. Bondy, Attorney, Appellate Staff, Civil Division,
U.S. Department of Justice, with whom Peter D. Keisler, Assistant
Attorney General, Jeffrey S. Bucholtz, Acting Assistant Attorney
General, Jonathan F. Cohn, Deputy Assistant Attorney General,
Steven I. Frank and Jonathan H. Levy, Attorneys, Appellate Staff,
Civil Division, U.S. Department of Justice, were on brief, for
appellant/cross-appellee.

     William E. Christie, with whom Steven M. Gordon and Shaheen &
Gordon, P.A. were on brief, for appellees/cross-appellants.



                        October 16, 2008
              LIPEZ, Circuit Judge.           This case is another chapter in

the saga of the relationship between the FBI's Boston Office and

two organized crime figures, James "Whitey" Bulger and Stephen

Flemmi, whose unlawful, violent conduct in that city spanned three

decades.      Following an eighteen-day bench trial featuring nine

witnesses and thousands of pages of exhibits, the district court

concluded that former FBI agent John Connolly was acting within the

scope    of   his     employment      when    he    leaked    the   identity    of   an

informant, John McIntyre, resulting in McIntyre's brutal murder by

Bulger, Flemmi and their associates in the notorious Winter Hill

Gang.         The     court    consequently         awarded     McIntyre's      estate

approximately $3.1 million in damages against the government under

the Federal Tort Claims Act (FTCA), 28 U.S.C. § 1346.

              The government has appealed, arguing that Connolly was a

rogue    agent      whose    disclosure      of    McIntyre's   identity      violated

fundamental FBI policies and was beyond any rational view of

conduct falling within the scope of his employment.                     We reject the

government's position.           We affirm the judgment of the district

court.

                                             I.

              The district court meticulously set out the factual

background       of   this    case,    detailing       the    decades    of    history

concerning Bulger's and Flemmi's involvement with the FBI in Boston

and, in particular, the pair's relationship with Connolly.                           See


                                          -3-
McIntyre v. United States, 447 F. Supp. 2d 54, 62-104 (D. Mass.

2006).     Parts of that more than 40-page history also have been

reported in other opinions that we have issued, including our

decision affirming Connolly's conviction on charges stemming from

his efforts to facilitate Bulger's and Flemmi's criminal activities

and   to    protect   them      and   their    associates    from   arrest    and

prosecution. See United States v. Connolly, 504 F.3d 206 (1st Cir.

2007); McIntyre v. United States, 367 F.3d 38 (1st Cir. 2004);

United States v. Connolly, 341 F.3d 16 (1st Cir. 2003).               Unable to

improve on the district court's exhaustive review of the record, we

provide     here   only   a    summary    of   the   facts   essential   to    an

understanding of the scope of employment issue at the heart of this

case.    However, we assume the reader's familiarity with all of the

district court's factual findings, which have not been challenged

by the government on appeal. Our precis borrows liberally from the

district court's well stated recitation, as well as from our own

prior opinions.

A. Connolly's Official Role with Bulger and Flemmi

             Bulger and Flemmi were informants for the FBI's Boston

office at various times during a period of more than twenty-five

years.     Flemmi was first recruited in 1964 and Bulger in 1971, and

both men provided information off and on until 1990. McIntyre, 447

F. Supp. 2d at 73.            They were considered particularly valuable

sources for the office's high-priority investigation of the Boston


                                         -4-
branch of La Cosa Nostra ("LCN").1      Although they were members of

the competing Winter Hill Gang, Bulger and Flemmi frequently

consorted with LCN members "and purported to transmit inside

information to the FBI concerning organized crime activities in New

England." Connolly, 504 F.3d at 210. The Boston LCN investigation

proved fruitful, leading to the 1983 arrests and 1986 convictions

of the leading figures of the Boston branch, Gennaro Angiulo and

Illario Zannino, as well as other LCN members.            McIntyre, 447 F.

Supp. 2d at 63.

           Connolly, who joined the FBI in 1968, served as Bulger

and   Flemmi's   "handler"   during   most   of   their    tenure   as   FBI

informants, beginning in 1975. Connolly, 341 F.3d at 20; McIntyre,

447 F. Supp. 2d at 73-74.2      In that capacity, he met with them


      1
       As the district court related, "[d]uring the late 1970s and
early 1980s, the stated national priority of the FBI's Organized
Crime Program was the takedown of Cosa Nostra." 447 F. Supp. 2d at
62 (citing Ex. 69, April 1980 Memo from Director, FBI to Attorney
General, at 17) ("The majority of resources, both investigative and
prosecutorial, should continue to be expended and directed against
LCN, the most powerful of the organized crime groups, as it
represents a greater threat to this nation than all other organized
crime groups combined."). The Boston LCN branch was likewise "the
number one priority of the Organized Crime Program in the Boston
Division of the FBI . . . in the 1970s and early 1980s." Id. at
62-63 (citing, inter alia, Ex. 110, April 1981, Addendum of
Supervisor Morris) ("Consistent with the national priority, the
LCN is the primary target of the Organized Crime Program in the
Boston Division."); see also Tr. Day 6, at 55 (Testimony of Robert
Fitzpatrick, Assistant Special Agent in Charge ("ASAC") of the
Boston Office, acknowledging that LCN "was the number one priority"
in the office).
      2
       Connolly was assigned to the Boston Office's C-3 Squad,
which worked solely on organized crime, from October 1973 until

                                  -5-
regularly and controlled other agents' access to them.                 Rarely did

other FBI agents talk with the two men outside of Connolly's

presence.      See, e.g., id. at 87 (stating that Connolly served as an

intermediary with Bulger and Flemmi for other agents investigating

several murders); id. at 90 (noting that the Boston office rejected

a request that Bulger and Flemmi be interviewed in connection with

two murders "upon instructions from FBI Headquarters that no one

other than Connolly" should interview them); id. at 91 (noting

Agent Montanari's belief that "Bulger and Flemmi, 'as informants of

an    agent'    would     refuse   to   meet   with    him    absent   Connolly's

intervention"); id. at 98 ("Bulger and Flemmi communicated almost

exclusively with Connolly, and they refused to work with any other

handler.").          When Connolly retired suddenly in 1990, Bulger and

Flemmi were immediately closed as informants.                Id.

B.    Connolly's Collaboration with Bulger and Flemmi

               At some point, the relationship between Connolly and his

two informants turned illicit.             A grand jury indicted Connolly in

2000 on charges of racketeering, obstruction of justice, conspiracy

and   making     a    false   statement,    alleging   that    he   had   provided

protection, the identities of informants, and other assistance to

Bulger and Flemmi in exchange for bribes and favors.3                      He was


March 1988.       Id. at 64-65.
       3
       Through the years, Connolly received more than $200,000 in
cash and gifts from Bulger and Flemmi. 447 F. Supp. 2d at 110
(citing Flemmi's testimony, Tr. Day 2, at 98; Day 3, at 82-83).

                                        -6-
convicted in 2002 and sentenced to 121 months in prison.4    We twice

rejected his appeals.   See Connolly, 504 F.3d 206; Connolly, 341

F.3d 16.

           Among Connolly's misdeeds was disclosure of the names of

at least two informants, before the McIntyre episode, both of whom

were murdered by Flemmi, Bulger or their associates shortly after

the leaks.   Flemmi stated that, in December 1976, Connolly told

Bulger that a bookmaker who did business with the Winter Hill gang,

Richard Castucci, had been cooperating with the FBI.   Tr.    Day 1,

at 90-91; Ex. 3 at 7 (Agreed Statement of Facts in United States v.

Flemmi, No. 99-10371 (D. Mass. May 23, 2001)).   Castucci was shot

to death by members of the group later that month.5         A second

informant, Edward "Brian" Halloran, approached the FBI in early

1982 with information about the Winter Hill Gang and their possible

involvement the previous year in the murder in Tulsa, Oklahoma, of

a businessman named Roger Wheeler.6      Among other information,


     4
       At the conclusion of a three-week trial, a federal jury
found him guilty of one count of racketeering, two counts of
obstruction of justice, and one count of making false statements.
Connolly, 341 F.3d at 19.
     5
       Flemmi testified that John Martorano shot Castucci in the
head, and that Flemmi and Bulger disposed of the body. Tr. Day 1,
at 93-94.
     6
       The Winter Hill associates were, in fact, responsible for
Wheeler's murder.    Flemmi and Bulger provided weapons for the
killing, and Martorano shot him outside his country club in Tulsa,
Oklahoma on May 27, 1981. Tr. Day 2, at 21-22 (Flemmi testimony);
Ex. 3, at 10. Wheeler was the owner of World Jai Alai ("WJA"), a
business that operated in Florida and Connecticut. He had drawn

                                -7-
Halloran told Agent Leo Brunnick that Bulger and Flemmi met with

Connolly on a weekly basis and that the two men "had a 'pipeline

into the Boston Office.'"7    447 F. Supp. 2d at 83 (citing Ex. 84,

Memo from Brunnick).    Sometime before May 11, 1982, Connolly told

Bulger of Halloran's cooperation.        Tr. Day 2, at 34-35 (Flemmi

testimony).     Bulger shot and killed Halloran and an associate,

Michael Donahue, on May 11, as they were leaving a restaurant in

Boston.    447 F. Supp. 2d at 86.8

            Agents at the FBI's Boston Office and at FBI Headquarters

suspected that Bulger and Flemmi were involved in the Wheeler,

Halloran and Donahue murders.     447 F. Supp. 2d at 84-86.   Indeed,

Halloran had told Agent Brunnick and his partner, Agent Gerald

Montanari, that Bulger, Flemmi and Callahan9 were responsible for

plotting Wheeler's murder and that he, Halloran, had been paid

$20,000 to keep quiet about it.      Id. at 82-83 (citing Ex. 27, Memo


the wrath of the Winter Hill gang by refusing to sell the business
to John Callahan, who was the former president of WJA and had lost
his license to operate a parimutual betting business in Connecticut
because of his relationship with "his gangster friends," including
members of the Winter Hill gang. McIntyre, 447 F. Supp. 2d at 81
(citing Ex. 3); see also Tr. Day 2, at 20 (Flemmi testimony).
     7
       Brunnick's memo further states that the "pipeline" was "not
necessarily Connolly" and that Halloran had "no information or
indication that Connolly is furnishing any information to Stevie or
Whitey."
     8
       As the district court observed, Donahue's killing appears to
be a classic case of being "in the wrong place at the wrong time."
447 F. Supp. 2d at 86.
     9
         See supra note 6.

                                  -8-
from McWeeney); Tr. Day 15, at 18 (Montanari testimony).          He also

told the agents that Martorano – the gunman – might be using

Callahan's Fort Lauderdale condominium as a safe-house. Id. at 83.

All of Halloran's information was passed along to FBI Headquarters.

Id.   at   84.   Although   some   details   of   Halloran's   story   were

investigated, "inexplicably, the Boston Office never followed up on

Halloran's claim that Martorano, the reported shooter in the

Wheeler murder and a federal fugitive, was hiding out at Callahan's

condominium in Florida."     Id. at 85.

            In the last week of May 1982, meetings to discuss the

Wheeler and Halloran killings took place in Washington and Boston.

At the Washington meeting, agents from Boston, Miami and Oklahoma

City, as well as officials from FBI Headquarters, acknowledged that

Bulger and Flemmi were suspects in the cases, but a decision was

made to retain them as "open" informants because the allegations

against them were unsubstantiated and they were extremely valuable

assets in the LCN investigation.     Id. at 87 (citing Ex. 30, May 25,

1982 Memo from ASAC Fitzpatrick to Special Agent in Charge ("SAC")

Lawrence Sarhatt); Tr. Day 9, at 59-60 (Fitzpatrick testimony).10

If the suspicions had been confirmed, agency policy would have




      10
       Fitzpatrick testified that, despite his view that Bulger,
at least, should be closed as an informant, "everyone at
headquarters thought he should remain open" because "he was too
valuable."

                                   -9-
prevented their retention as informants without authorization from

the highest levels of the FBI and Justice Department.11

            At a follow-up meeting two days later in Boston, Connolly

– who had not been at the meeting in Washington – was informed that

Bulger and Flemmi were the focus of the investigation into the

Wheeler and Halloran murders.       He argued that they were not

involved.   It was agreed that the agents investigating the murders

would not directly interview Bulger and Flemmi, and would rely

instead on Connolly acting as an intermediary.    447 F. Supp. 2d at

87.

            Two months later, Callahan also was dead.   Connolly had

told Bulger in July that the FBI was looking for Callahan to

question him in connection with the Wheeler murder.     Tr. Day 2, at


      11
        The FBI's rules regarding the handling of informants,
contained in Section 137 of the agency's Manual of Investigative
Operations and Guidelines ("MIOG"), required supervisors to make
written findings on the "suitability" of an individual to serve as
an informant. Ex. 6, § 137-17(1) (Attorney General's Guidelines on
FBI Use of Informants and Confidential Sources, Part D(1)(1981)).
Although the Guidelines allow use of informants who are involved in
criminal activity, the crimes must not be "of a serious nature."
447 F. Supp. 2d at 68 (citing Guidelines at Part G(2)). If a field
office learned that an informant had participated in a "serious act
of violence," it was required to notify FBI Headquarters and only
the Director or a "senior Headquarters official" could approve the
continued use of such an informant – after consultation with the
Assistant Attorney General in charge of the Criminal Division. Id.
at 69-70 (citing Guidelines at Part G(3)). Throughout their tenure
as informants, Flemmi and Bulger were "closed" – i.e., terminated
as informants – and re-opened multiple times.       Id. at 74 n.35
(giving a chronology of Bulger's and Flemmi's openings and closings
as informants between 1964 and 1990). At least with respect to
Flemmi, a closing had little effect; he was treated as an informant
regardless of his official status. Id. at 74.

                                 -10-
37 (Flemmi testimony).    According to Flemmi, Connolly also told

Bulger that "Callahan was a weak link who would not be able to

withstand the pressure of an FBI interrogation."    447 F. Supp. 2d

at 88.    Bulger and Flemmi concluded that Callahan needed to be

killed. Their usual hit man, Martorano, assisted by another Winter

Hill member, Joseph McDonald, killed Callahan at Fort Lauderdale

International Airport on August 1, 1982.   Id. at 87 (citing Tr. Day

2, at 40-41, Flemmi testimony).12

           The FBI's recognition of the apparent link between the

Winter Hill gang and three murders – Wheeler's, Halloran's and

Callahan's – was reported in a November 1982 memo sent by the Chief

of the FBI's Organized Crime Section, Sean McWeeney, to Associate

Deputy Director Oliver Revell.      The memo stated that "there is

evidence [the murders] were committed by an organized crime group

in Boston, Massachusetts, the Winter Hill gang." Id. at 88 (citing

Ex. 121, at 1).   James Greenleaf, who became the SAC of the Boston

Office on November 29, 1982, was among those copied on the memo,

which was generated at FBI Headquarters in Washington.

           By the time of that memo, Flemmi – but not Bulger – had

been closed as an informant.        Officially, the reason for the



     12
       Martorano picked up Callahan at the airport and shot him in
the back of the head after he entered Martorano's car. Martorano
and McDonald transferred the body to the trunk of Callahan's car,
where it was discovered after a parking attendant noticed blood
dripping from the vehicle. 447 F. Supp. 2d at 87 (citing Tr. Day
2, at 40-41, Flemmi testimony).

                                -11-
closing was his possible implication in criminal activity unrelated

to the murders.    However, internal communications in the Boston

Office indicated that the murder investigation prompted his change

in status.    447 F. Supp. 2d at 88 n.59.           Despite his closing,

Flemmi continued to provide significant information to the FBI

throughout the period until he was re-opened in early July 1986.

Meanwhile, Bulger remained open and, in February 1983, while the

murder investigations were ongoing, he was designated a "Top

Echelon"   informant,   meaning   that   he   was   expected   to   provide

information about management-level activity of an organized crime

group. Id. at 66. Eventually, the murder investigation wound down

without a contemporaneous resolution, despite the forty or so

volumes of files that had been produced on the crimes.         Tr. Day 13,

at 96, 108 (Montanari testimony).13

C.   FBI Knowledge of Connolly's Conduct

           In its closing argument before the district court, the

government asserted that Bulger and Flemmi were not indicted in

connection with the murders and other criminal activity until 1995

because they were "very, very smart, and very, very cognizant of



     13
        Following an indictment in 1995, Flemmi pled guilty in 2003
to racketeering acts that included the Castucci, Wheeler, Callahan
and McIntyre murders. Another Winter Hill member, Kevin Weeks,
pled guilty to racketeering acts that included aiding and abetting
the Halloran, Donahue and McIntyre murders. 447 F. Supp. 2d at 59-
60 nn.5 & 6. Bulger, who was charged with similar crimes, has been
a fugitive since the indictment was issued. See Connolly, 504 F.3d
at 210.

                                  -12-
everything that was going on around them."           Tr. Day 18, at 121.

However, considerable evidence supports the district court's view

that their awareness was not solely attributable to their own

skills and acuity.       Other law enforcement representatives had

expressed concern about the Boston Office's "too-close association"

with members of Winter Hill.       447 F. Supp. 2d at 89.     In a meeting

with FBI Headquarters representatives in November 1982, Florida

state and local law enforcement members who were responsible for

investigating the Callahan murder reported that they were reluctant

to provide information to the Boston Office because they believed

the   Winter   Hill   connection   had    been   hindering   that   office's

investigation into the murders.          Id.14   The concerns from Florida

were relayed in a memo from Organized Crime Chief McWeeney to

Associate Deputy Director Revell:

           Inferences could be drawn from conversations
           indicating   that   these  state   and   local
           officials were of the opinion that the FBI had
           confidential informants within the Winter Hill
           organization and because of this their efforts
           against this group were curtailed. In fact,
           FBI Boston has previously utilized two
           suspects in this matter as organized crime
           sources in the Boston Division.


      14
        The Florida representatives also were troubled by the
association between personnel in the FBI's Miami Office and a
former Boston Office agent, H. Paul Rico, who at the time of the
murders was working as head of security at World Jai Alai. 447 F.
Supp. 2d at 89. In 1969, Rico had warned Flemmi that he was about
to be indicted, enabling Flemmi to become a fugitive for five
years. Flemmi testified that he returned to Boston in 1974 after
Rico told him he would be protected from prosecution. Id. at 78-
79; see Tr. Day 2, at 71-75 (Flemmi testimony).

                                   -13-
Ex. 121, at 6; see also id. at 3 (noting the belief of law

enforcement agencies in Miami that "some Agents in the Boston FBI

would     not    pursue    allegations      against    the   Winter    Hill     gang

vigorously").

                In addition to these hints that the Boston Office was

protecting Bulger and Flemmi from murder charges, the FBI had been

told explicitly by Halloran that someone in the office was leaking

information to them.             In his testimony, Flemmi confirmed that

Connolly reported to him and Bulger on the progress of the murder

investigation,       Tr.   Day    3,   at   71-72,    as   well   as   on   a   1984

investigation by the Drug Enforcement Administration into suspected

drug activity by Bulger and Flemmi, id. at 23.15 The district court

also found that "there had long been allegations of leaks by

Connolly from the Massachusetts State Police."               447 F. Supp. 2d at

95 n.71.

                Despite the concerns from various sources that Connolly

was improperly disclosing information to Bulger and Flemmi, he

consistently received one of the FBI's top two ratings for his

overall performance and his handling of informants throughout the

period from 1978 to 1987.          Id. at 96.    On one occasion, Connolly's

then-supervisor, Agent James Ring, was chastised by an inspector


     15
        The DEA investigation did not produce results even though
Bulger and Flemmi were involved in drug trafficking from
approximately 1981 to 1990. 447 F. Supp. 2d at 94 (citing Tr. Day
2, at 62-63 (Flemmi testimony)). They eventually were indicted for
their drug activity in 1995.

                                        -14-
from FBI Headquarters for rating Connolly "superior" rather than

"exceptional."       Id. at 97.      In a memo to the Special Agent in

Charge of the Boston Office, Inspector Bob Reutter stated that he

considered "'the contributions made by SA [Special Agent] Connolly

as    crucial   to   the   overall   OC   [Organized   Crime]   program   and

substantial in terms of the results achieved.'"           Id. (quoting Ex.

55w, Memo of July 8, 1987).          Connolly was repeatedly recommended

for salary increases and monetary awards on the basis of his

performance,16 and he was asked by FBI Headquarters to instruct

other federal agents on the development and handling of informants.

Id.    In 1988, he became the Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task

Force Coordinator in the Boston Office.          Id.

D. McIntyre's FBI Involvement and Murder

            McIntyre's relationship with the FBI's Boston Office

began in the fall of 1984, shortly after the United States Customs

Service seized a ship, the Valhalla, on which he was serving as a


       16
       In a Performance Appraisal Report covering the period from
November 15, 1981 through November 12, 1982 – during which Halloran
and Callahan were killed – Connolly was praised for "develop[ing],
maintain[ing], and operat[ing] a corps of extremely high level and
productive informants."    Ex. 55e.    The Report continued: "His
direction and their resultant information has brought about results
exceeded by none in the Boston Division's Organized Crime Program.
. . . His performance has been at the level to which all should
aspire to attain but few will realistically reach." A memo from
the Boston Office to the Director of the FBI in August 1981 stated
that Connolly "currently operates . . . high-placed informants
furnishing information on Organized Crime in the New England area
and has significantly contributed toward the achievement of the OC
Squad goals and objectives especially through his skillful
direction of high-quality informants." Ex. 55h.

                                     -15-
crew member. The Valhalla had just returned from Ireland, where it

had delivered an illegal cargo of weapons and ammunition for the

Irish Republican Army ("IRA").         McIntyre, one of two crew members

on board, had already been cooperating with agents of the Drug

Enforcement Agency ("DEA"),17 and the next day, October 17, 1984,

he met with a Customs agent, Philip Brady, and two FBI officers,

Roderick Kennedy and George Bertram.            Brady and Kennedy were

members of the Drug Task Force, which consisted of representatives

from Customs, the IRS and the FBI.           Bertram was present at the

meeting because he covered the IRA for the FBI.        447 F. Supp. 2d at

99.

               During the meeting, McIntyre discussed an upcoming drug

shipment that was expected by Murray, whom customs already knew

paid "tribute" – a fee – to Bulger so that he could safely operate

his drug smuggling operation in South Boston.18            Id.     McIntyre

confirmed       the   Murray-Bulger   connection,   reporting    that   "'an

individual named Whitey [a Bulger nickname] who operates a liquor

store in South Boston became partners with Joe Murray.'"            Id. at

100.        McIntyre was released after he agreed to cooperate with

Customs and the FBI in the ongoing investigation into Murray's drug



       17
        McIntyre was working at the time for Joe Murray, another
Boston crime figure who was involved in drug and weapons smuggling.
       18
       Bulger and Flemmi collected "rent" or tribute from other
criminals as payment for the privilege of conducting activity
within territory controlled by them. Id. at 94 n.69.

                                      -16-
activities.   On the basis of information he provided, the combined

law enforcement agencies seized Murray's next drug load on a ship,

the Ramsland, as it entered Boston Harbor in mid-November 1984.

McIntyre was on board as a member of the "substitute crew" that had

replaced the ship's English crew at the mouth of the harbor.     The

ship was carrying thirty tons of marijuana, and Flemmi testified

that he expected to receive $1 million from the shipment's sales

proceeds.   Kevin Weeks, another Winter Hill member, testified that

he, Bulger and Flemmi each were to receive $3 million.

            After the Ramsland was seized, McIntyre reported to Brady

that Murray suspected someone in the substitute crew of cooperating

with law enforcement.    McIntyre did not feel that he was in danger,

and Brady also assumed McIntyre was not at risk because there had

been no apparent change in his relationship with Murray.      Id. at

101.   On November 22, a few days after the Ramsland's seizure,

McIntyre reported to Brady that Pat Nee, a Bulger associate, had

offered him the opportunity to invest $20,000 in a drug smuggling

venture.    Id.   In reality, the "offer" was a ruse designed to lure

McIntyre to meet with Bulger and Flemmi.       Id. at 102.   Customs

provided McIntyre with the money, and McIntyre delivered it to Nee

on November 29.     The next day, Nee brought McIntyre to a house in

South Boston, where McIntyre had expected a social gathering.

Instead, Flemmi and Bulger confronted him with their suspicion that

he had been cooperating with Customs.      After securing McIntyre's


                                  -17-
confession of his complicity with law enforcement, Bulger made an

unsuccessful attempt to strangle him, and then shot and killed him.

Id. at 102-104.   Fifteen years later, on January 14, 2000, Weeks

led authorities to McIntyre's makeshift grave.19

           Bulger and Flemmi learned that McIntyre was an informant

from Connolly, who had disclosed that one of the two individuals

taken off the Valhalla was cooperating with law enforcement.

Although   Connolly   did   not   identify   McIntyre   by   name,   the

information he conveyed was sufficient to reveal his identity to

Bulger and Flemmi, who knew that McIntyre had been one of the two

people on the ship.

E. The FTCA Litigation

           The relationship between the Winter Hill gang and the

Boston Office of the FBI was publicly exposed in 1999 in a lengthy

opinion issued by Judge Mark Wolf of the Massachusetts District

Court in United States v. Salemme, 91 F. Supp. 2d 141 (D. Mass.

1999), rev'd in part, 225 F.3d 78 (1st Cir. 2000).20            In his


     19
       McIntyre originally was buried in the basement of the house
where he was killed, next to another Bulger-Flemmi murder victim,
Arthur Barrett. See Barrett v. United States, 462 F.3d 28, 30 (1st
Cir. 2006).    A third victim, Deborah Hussey, was murdered and
buried in the house in early 1985. The remains of all three were
removed on Halloween night in 1985, when it appeared that the house
was about to be sold, and they were re-buried in Dorchester. 447
F. Supp. 2d at 104 n.88.
     20
       Francis Salemme was an associate of Bulger and Flemmi, and
he was indicted with them and others in January 1995 for varied
organized crime activities. Judge Wolf presided over the complex
proceedings in that case. The opinion cited above reviewed the

                                  -18-
decision, Judge Wolf outlined a possible pattern of corruption

involving Bulger, Flemmi, Connolly and at least one of Connolly's

FBI   supervisors,     John   Morris.      Judge   Wolf    speculated    in   his

opinion that Connolly may have disclosed McIntyre's identity to

Bulger and Flemmi.      Id. at 213; see also McIntyre v. United States,

367 F.3d 38, 40 (1st Cir. 2004).

              Five months later, in January 2000, McIntyre's body was

recovered.       On   May   25,   2000,   McIntyre's   estate,    through     its

administrator      (McIntyre's      mother,    Emily      McIntyre)     and   co-

administrator (his brother, Christopher McIntyre),21 filed this

action against the United States under the Federal Tort Claims

Act.22     The statute provides that the United States may be sued for

money damages for personal injury or death caused by the negligent

or otherwise wrongful acts or omissions of its employees while

acting within the scope of their office or employment.                28 U.S.C.




background of Flemmi's and Bulger's relationship with the FBI,
describing many of the same incidents detailed in the district
court's opinion in this case. Much of the analysis in Judge Wolf's
opinion was devoted to Flemmi's motions to dismiss the charges
against him and to suppress statements he had made to the FBI based
on FBI promises of immunity.
      21
       For convenience, we at times will refer to the plaintiffs
in this case as McIntyre.
      22
       McIntyre also asserted claims against Bulger, Flemmi, Weeks
and eight former agents of the Boston Office of the FBI, including
Connolly. The district court bifurcated the trial of the claims
against the United States from the trial of the individual claims,
and only the case against the government is before us.

                                      -19-
§ 1346.23 The McIntyre claim was premised on multiple theories: (1)

that    the   FBI   directly   caused   McIntyre's   death   when   Connolly

informed Bulger and Flemmi that McIntyre was cooperating with

authorities, foreseeably leading to his murder, (2) that the agency

indirectly caused his death through the protection its agents

afforded Bulger and Flemmi, which encouraged and enabled them to

commit murders, including McIntyre's, and (3) that other agents

negligently supervised Connolly, failing to take corrective action

even though they knew or should have known that Connolly was

leaking information to Bulger and Flemmi and protecting them from

investigation, arrest and prosecution.         McIntyre, 367 F.3d at 41;

McIntyre, 447 F. Supp. 2d at 59.        The claims proceeded to trial on

June 5, 2006.24


       23
       The FTCA is a limited waiver of the federal government's
sovereign immunity, granting federal courts jurisdiction over
claims that fall within its scope. These include claims

       for injury or loss of property, or personal injury or
       death caused by the negligent or wrongful act or omission
       of any employee of the Government while acting within the
       scope of his office or employment, under circumstances
       where the United States, if a private person, would be
       liable to the claimant in accordance with the law of the
       place where the act or omission occurred.

28 U.S.C. § 1346(b)(1).
       24
       The district court had granted the government's motion to
dismiss McIntyre's action as untimely on the ground that the
prerequisite administrative claim was not filed within two years of
accrual, as required by the FTCA, 28 U.S.C. § 2401(b). We reversed
the dismissal and remanded after concluding that the factual
predicate for McIntyre's claims could not reasonably have been
known earlier. See McIntyre, 367 F.3d at 56-57.

                                    -20-
             On September 5, 2006, the district court issued its

comprehensive decision in favor of the plaintiffs, reaching only

the first of McIntyre's theories of liability. The court found the

United States responsible for McIntyre's death "because Connolly,

acting within the scope of his employment, disclosed information to

Bulger and Flemmi sufficient for them to identify McIntyre as a

government    informant,    and    McIntyre's      death   was    a   foreseeable

consequence of that disclosure."           447 F. Supp. 2d at 60.        As noted

above, the court awarded McIntyre's estate approximately $3.1

million in damages.25

                                         II.

             An FTCA suit may be brought only if the conduct on which

the action is based would support a cause of action against a

private person under "the law of the place where the act or

omission occurred."       28 U.S.C. § 1346(b)(1); McCloskey v. Mueller,

446   F.3d   262,   266   (1st    Cir.    2006).     In    this   instance,   the

applicable state law is the Massachusetts wrongful death statute,

which allows recovery for deaths caused by negligence.                 Mass. Gen.

Laws. ch. 229, § 2; see also Mitchell v. United States, 141 F.3d 8,

13 (1st Cir. 1998).




      25
       The damages consisted of $3 million for McIntyre's conscious
suffering during the few minutes that Bulger attempted to strangle
and then shot him, $100,000 for his mother's loss of consortium,
and $1,876 in funeral and burial expenses.

                                     -21-
            To   succeed   with    such   a     claim   under    the   FTCA,   the

plaintiff must satisfy the state's standard for tort liability.

Mitchell, 141 F.3d at 13.            Under      Massachusetts law, "a tort

plaintiff must show that (1) the defendant owed him a duty, (2) the

defendant   breached    that      duty,   (3)    the    breach   constituted     a

proximate cause of the ensuing harm, and (4) the breach caused

actual injury."      Fithian v. Reed, 204 F.3d 306, 308 (1st Cir.

2000); see also McCloskey, 446 F.3d at 267; Jupin v. Kask, 849

N.E.2d 829, 834-35 (Mass. 2006).

            In its appeal of the district court's ruling, the United

States presents a narrow challenge:26 it claims that the court erred

only in concluding that Connolly's leak of McIntyre's identity fell

within the scope of his employment for the FBI, the prerequisite to

liability against the United States under the FTCA.               See 28 U.S.C.

§ 1346(b)(1) (providing recovery "for personal injury or death

caused by the negligent or wrongful act or omission of any employee

of the Government while acting within the scope of his office or

employment").     The government does not take issue with the court's

findings on the state-law elements of the FTCA claim: that Connolly

had a duty to protect McIntyre from harm at the hands of Bulger and

Flemmi because of his informant status, id. at 106-108, that



     26
       Both parties also have appealed, on different grounds, the
calculation of post-judgment interest on the damages award.
Neither party disputes the assertion of the other, and we therefore
touch on that issue only briefly in Section III below.

                                     -22-
disclosure of McIntyre's identity as an informant breached that

duty, id. at 108, and that McIntyre's murder was a foreseeable risk

of that disclosure, id. at 111.           Accordingly, we confine our

discussion to the scope of employment question.

A. Legal Principles

            Whether an employee is acting within the scope of his

employment for purposes of the FTCA is determined by the law of the

state in which the relevant conduct occurred.        Aversa v. United

States, 99 F.3d 1200, 1209 (1st Cir. 1996).       Under Massachusetts

law, an employee's conduct is within the scope of his or her

employment if (1) it is of the kind the employee was hired to

perform, (2) it occurs within "authorized time and space limits,"

and (3) "'it is motivated, at least in part, by a purpose to serve

the employer.'"    Pinshaw v. Metro. Dist. Comm'n, 524 N.E.2d 1351,

1356 (Mass. 1988) (quoting Wang Labs., Inc. v. Business Incentives,

Inc., 501 N.E.2d 1163, 1163 (Mass. 1986)); see also Clickner v.

City of Lowell, 663 N.E.2d 852, 855 (Mass. 1996).

            The scope of employment "is not construed restrictively,"

Howard v. Town of Burlington, 506 N.E.2d 102, 105 (Mass. 1987); see

also Commonwealth v. Jerez, 457 N.E.2d 1105, 1108 (Mass. 1983),27


     27
          In Jerez, the court observed:

     We long have recognized that acts not strictly necessary
     for fulfilment of an agent's duties nonetheless may fall
     within the agent's scope of employment. The scope of an
     agent's authority is not construed restrictively in this
     Commonwealth, and on several occasions we have considered

                                 -23-
and it may extend beyond the employee's explicit authority, Howard,

506 N.E.2d at 105.   "[I]t is ordinarily the actual and customary,

rather than formally described, duties which determine scope of

employment."   Id. at 105-106.    In elaborating on the employer's

responsibility for unauthorized acts, the Massachusetts Supreme

Judicial Court observed:

          "If the act complained of was within the scope
          of the servant's authority, the master will be
          liable, although it constituted an abuse or
          excess of the authority conferred. The master
          . . . is justly held responsible when the
          servant,   through   lack   of   judgment   or
          discretion, or from infirmity of temper, or
          under the influence of passion aroused by the
          circumstances and the occasion, goes beyond
          the strict line of his duty or authority and
          inflicts an unjustifiable injury on a third
          person."

Pinshaw, 524 N.E.2d at 1356 (quoting Kent v. Bradley, 480 S.W.2d

55, 57 (Tex. Civ. App. 1972)).      We also have recognized that a

principal may be responsible for conduct customarily within its

agent's scope of employment "'even though it is established fact

that the act was forbidden by the principal.'"    United States v.

Potter, 463 F.3d 9, 26 (1st Cir. 2006) (quoting Harold Reuschlein

& William Gregory, The Law of Agency and Partnership 167 (1990));

see also Restatement (Second) of Agency § 230 ("An act, although




     whether an intentional tort committed by an agent was
     performed within the scope of his employment.

457 N.E.2d at 1108 (citations omitted).

                                 -24-
forbidden, or done in a forbidden manner, may be within the scope

of employment.").28

           The Restatement lists a number of factors to consider in

determining whether unauthorized conduct is sufficiently similar or

incidental    to    authorized   conduct    to   be   within   the   scope   of

employment, including whether the employer "has reason to expect

that such an act will be done," "the similarity in quality of the

act done to the act authorized," "the extent of departure from the

normal method of accomplishing an authorized result," and "whether

or not the act is seriously criminal."            Restatement (Second) of

Agency, § 229 (2)(f), (g), (i), (j).29            As with forbidden acts,

criminal     acts   are   not    automatically    outside      the   scope   of

employment.    See Restatement (Second) of Agency § 231.



     28
       The Restatement illustrates the "forbidden act" principle
by giving the example of a gun salesman who has been directed never
to insert a cartridge while exhibiting a gun.       A salesman who
violated the directive would nonetheless be acting within the scope
of his employment. Restatement (Second) of Agency § 230, illus. 1
(1958); see also Potter, 463 F.3d at 26 n.10 (describing
Restatement illustration).     We note that Massachusetts courts
routinely rely on the Restatement in examining scope-of-employment
questions. See, e.g., Clickner, 663 N.E.2d at 855; Pinshaw, 524
N.E.2d at 1356; Howard, 506 N.E.2d at 106; Wang,501 N.E.2d at 1166-
67.
     29
       The other relevant factors listed in § 229(2) are: whether
the act is commonly done by such employees; the time, place and
purpose of the act; the previous relations between the employer and
employee; the extent to which the employer's work is apportioned
among different employees; whether the act is outside the
employer's business or has not been entrusted to any employee; and
whether the instrumentality by which the harm is done has been
furnished by the employer.

                                     -25-
B.    The District Court Decision and the Standard of Review

            The district court concluded that Connolly's leak of

McIntyre's identity to Bulger and Flemmi was within the scope of

his   employment   as   an   FBI   agent    because   "[t]he   management   of

informants was both a formal job requirement and an actual and

customary duty of FBI agents," 447 F. Supp. 2d at 108, and

communicating with informants was the "'kind of conduct [Connolly]

was employed to perform,'" 447 F. Supp. 2d at 109 (quoting Wang,

501 N.E.2d at 1166).         In explaining its conclusion, the court

cited, inter alia, Connolly's long relationship with Bulger and

Flemmi and his responsibility to obtain information from them,

which required Connolly to "maintain his relationship with them and

cultivate their goodwill."         Id.   The court also noted the decades

of protection afforded to Bulger and Flemmi by the FBI, reflecting

their high value to the agency, and it pointed as well to the

agency's repeated endorsement of Connolly's handling of informants.

Id.

            In discussing the third prong of the Massachusetts test

– motivation – the court began by explicitly crediting Flemmi's

testimony that he and Bulger gave Connolly in excess of $200,000

between 1981 and 1990.          Id. at 110.       The court acknowledged

Connolly's personal interest in keeping Bulger and Flemmi happy,

and found that the leak about McIntyre's identity was partially

motivated by greed and the desire to maintain his friendship with


                                     -26-
the two men.     Id. at 111.           However, the court also found that he

was "motivated, at least in part, by a desire to promote the FBI's

goal of taking down Cosa Nostra through the use of Bulger and

Flemmi as informants."           Id.

            We review the scope of employment determination de novo.

Aversa,    99   F.3d    at   1210.       The    underlying   factual   findings,

including the court's determination of Connolly's motive, are

reviewed for clear error.           See Reyelt v. Danzell, 533 F.3d 28, 31

(1st Cir. 2008) ("[T]he [district] court's factual findings are

reviewed only for clear error . . . ."); Aversa, 99 F.3d at 1212-13

(noting that district court "justifiably could find" that employee

intended, "at least in part and although misguidedly, to serve an

objective of his employer").

C. Discussion

            The government argues that the United States may not be

held responsible for McIntyre's death because Connolly "departed in

[]   an   extreme      fashion    from    any   recognized   boundary    of   the

employment concept . . . , committ[ing] the most fundamental and

heinous betrayal of his job." In the government's view, Connolly's

action was "the opposite of the scope of employment."              In the terms

of the multi-prong framework of Massachusetts law, the United

States maintains that leaking McIntire's identity was neither the




                                         -27-
kind of conduct Connolly was hired to perform (prong one) nor

motivated by a purpose to serve the FBI (prong three).30

             In support of its view, the government cites numerous

ways    in   which    Connolly's   action       was   at    odds   with   the   FBI's

interests.      It emphasizes that the leak of an informant's identity

is   contrary    to    explicit    FBI    policy,31    it    violated     Connolly's

Employment Agreement with the FBI,32 and such a disclosure would

jeopardize the agency's continuing ability to recruit informants –

who are a crucial tool in the FBI's investigatory efforts.                        The

government additionally characterizes Connolly's leak of McIntyre's

identity as a form of theft or embezzlement that he committed in

exchange for the money and other gifts provided by Bulger and


       30
        Prong two – requiring that the conduct occur "within
authorized time and space limits" – warrants little discussion.
There is no dispute that Connolly was the handler for Bulger and
Flemmi when he disclosed McIntyre's identity, and his job was not
confined to specific hours or locations. Consequently, prong two
is easily satisfied.
       31
       The FBI's Manual of Investigative Operations and Guidelines
cautioned that agents must take care in handling informants "to
insure that they are not provided any information other than that
necessary to carry out their assignments." See Ex. 6, Guidelines,
§ 137-3(8) (1978).
       32
        The agreement that Connolly signed acknowledges his
understanding that "unauthorized disclosure of information in the
files of the FBI or information I may acquire as an employee of the
FBI could . . . prevent the FBI from effectively discharging its
responsibilities," and he agreed never to "divulge, publish, or
reveal either by word or conduct . . . to any unauthorized
recipient without official written authorization by the Director of
the FBI or his delegate, any information from the investigatory
files of the FBI . . . or disclose any information . . . acquired
as a part of the performance of my official duties."

                                         -28-
Flemmi, and it argues that taking bribes to steal from an employer

can never constitute conduct within the scope of employment.

          As to motivation, the government highlights Connolly's

conviction for collaborating with Bulger and Flemmi, and argues

that the McIntyre leak was motivated solely by his desire to

further their joint criminal enterprise and to protect them from

prosecution.   The government argues that there is no evidence that

Connolly's   revelation   of    McIntyre's     identity     was   in   any   way

intended to further the interests of the FBI; rather, it was in

keeping with other acts of betrayal that he committed to advance

his personal interests at the expense of the FBI and its mission.

          Connolly's role as Bulger's and Flemmi's handler cannot,

the government insists, place all of his interactions with them

within the scope of his employment.          Protecting them at any cost –

and facilitating McIntyre's murder – was not the sort of conduct he

was hired to perform.          The government's view is perhaps best

summarized by its statement at oral argument that, by the time of

the McIntyre leak, "this guy [had] crossed to the other side; he

was a criminal who had a day job as an FBI agent."

          We understand the government's perspective.                  Connolly

took advantage of his law enforcement status to form a corrupt

relationship   with   Bulger    and    Flemmi.     As   a   general     matter,

disclosing an informant's identity to violent criminals who have a

penchant for murdering people whom they consider a threat seems far


                                      -29-
outside the range of conduct Connolly was employed to perform. The

McIntyre leak violated a bright-line law enforcement rule that

informant identity never be revealed, and put at risk the life of

an individual who was helping the FBI.        There is some appeal in the

government's position that such conduct is categorically outside

the scope of an FBI agent's employment and that, consequently, it

could   only   be   motivated   by   Connolly's   desire   to   advance   his

lucrative, unlawful second "career."

           The government's depiction of the case, however, fails to

acknowledge its extraordinary context.            The factors it lists in

arguing that Connolly's disclosure of McIntyre's identity fell

outside the scope of his employment – including the contractual and

policy prohibitions on leaks, the "'seriously criminal'" nature of

his action, and its "extreme 'departure from the normal method of

[handling informants],'" Reply Brief at 8 (quoting Restatement

(Second) of Agency, § 229(2)(j),(i)) – paint Connolly as a lone

renegade whose outrageous, unprecedented behavior could not have

been anticipated by his superiors.          This assessment of Connolly's

conduct is unduly narrow.

           Although it is undisputed that Connolly had no explicit

authority to disclose McIntyre's identity, we must look to his

"actual and customary" duties to determine if the leak may be

considered within the scope of his employment.         Howard, 506 N.E.2d

at 105-106; see also Potter, 463 F.3d at 26;.         As we shall explain,


                                     -30-
we agree with the district court that Connolly's disclosure was

within the boundaries of the FBI's longstanding method of handling

Bulger and Flemmi through Connolly, and that it consequently is

"'just'" to treat the harm caused by the disclosure "'as one of the

normal risks to be borne by the business in which the servant is

employed,'" Croes v. United States, 726 F.2d 31, 32-33 (1st Cir.

1984) (quoting Restatement (Second) of Agency, § 229 (cmt. a)).

            1.    Prong One: Kind of Employment

            The FBI as an institution had selected La Cosa Nostra as

its highest priority, and it correctly viewed Bulger and Flemmi as

uniquely effective tools in dismantling Winter Hill's organized

crime competitor.         As a result, the two men received kid-glove

treatment from all levels of the FBI for decades.                 The district

court recounts in great detail that suspicions about Bulger's and

Flemmi's    involvement     in   serious    crimes    were   repeatedly    left

unexplored   or    were    pursued   minimally,      and   the   FBI   routinely

departed from the agency's regulations when working with them –

presumably to assure that they would remain available to provide

critical LCN intelligence.

            Examples of this deferential handling of Bulger and

Flemmi abound in the record.            They include judgments made by

Headquarters personnel as well as by supervisors in the Boston

Office.    Among them are the following, some of which we previously

have described in more detail:


                                     -31-
           (1) Bulger and Flemmi were removed from a 1979 indictment

charging a scheme to fix horse races, and listed only as unindicted

co-conspirators,     after    a   request     by   Connolly      and    his   then-

supervisor,   John   Morris,      because     of   their    value      to   the   LCN

investigation.   447 F. Supp. 2d at 80;33

           (2) At the Washington and Boston meetings in May 1982,

high level FBI officials decided to retain Bulger and Flemmi as

open informants despite suspicions about their roles in the Wheeler

and Halloran murders.        Id. at 87;

           (3) In response to a 1983 request from the Oklahoma City

Office of the FBI that Bulger and Flemmi's informant files be

examined for reports of activity around the time of the Wheeler and

Callahan murders, Connolly wrote a report – two years after the

Wheeler murder and a year after Callahan's – establishing alibis

for Bulger for both dates.             Connolly's supervisors apparently

accepted   the   report      without    questioning        its   delay,     despite

Connolly's conspicuous violation of FBI guidelines requiring a much

prompter report under the circumstances.             Id. at 90-91;34


     33
       At the time, neither Bulger nor Flemmi was officially open
as an informant. 447 F. Supp. 2d at 80.
     34
       The district court found that Connolly discussed the alibi
for the Wheeler death with Bulger shortly after the murder, telling
Bulger that if he were implicated in the killing, Connolly would
say that he and Bulger had spoken by telephone the night of the
murder and that Bulger was in Boston, not in Oklahoma City, at that
time. The memo Connolly prepared two years later provided just
such an alibi. 447 F. Supp. 2d at 82 (citing Ex. 111, Memo from
Connolly to SAC).    The Manual of Investigative Operations and

                                       -32-
           (4) When Bulger and Flemmi eventually were interviewed

about the murders following an inquiry from the Tulsa Police

Department,      they   were    interviewed    together    at    the    pair's

insistence, contrary to standard procedures.            Id. at 91;

           (5) The Boston Office files contained many references to

Bulger's   and    Flemmi's     involvement    between   1965    and    1987   in

loansharking and bookmaking, crimes that should have triggered

investigations into their suitability to remain informants. Id. at

76-78 & n.41.      Even during periods when Flemmi was closed as an

informant, he was treated as an informant, and during one closed

stretch in 1983, an agent who wanted to interview him approached

him through Connolly. Id. at 74 (citing Tr. Day 13, at 105-107,

Montanari testimony);35

           (6) James Greenleaf, the SAC of the Boston Office from

November 1982 through October 1986, testified that investigations

of Bulger and Flemmi by other law enforcement agencies "just didn't

register" with him. This lack of attention to the growing evidence



Guidelines requires that contacts with informants be recorded in
the informant's file at or near the time they occurred. Ex. 6,
Guidelines § 137-8(1) (1981) ("All information pertinent to our
investigative responsibilities furnished by informants must be
promptly reviewed, recorded, indexed, evaluated, channelized, and
all other necessary action taken.").
     35
       The continuity of the relationship violated FBI guidelines.
The MIOG requires that, when an informant is closed because he is
"no longer suitable to provide information or operational
assistance, his relationship with the Bureau shall be promptly
terminated." Ex. 6, § 137-17, Guidelines Part D(7).

                                    -33-
of the pair's involvement in serious criminal activity allowed him

to avoid meaningful suitability reviews of their status.     See Tr.

Day 14, at 104.36

           Although the United States asserts that Bulger and Flemmi

escaped prosecution and retained their informant status, sometimes

unofficially, because none of the FBI's suspicions were validated

by concrete evidence, the record supports the district court's

observation that "the FBI was not pounding the pavement looking for

evidence that could 'stick.'    Instead, the FBI stuck its head in

the sand when it came to the criminal activities of Bulger and

Flemmi."   447 F. Supp. 2d at 93.37    Indeed, the deference paid to

Bulger and Flemmi did not go unnoticed by the two men.        Flemmi


     36
        Greenleaf testified that a suitability review should be
conducted in response to reports of serious criminal activity, but
no suitability review was conducted for Bulger and Flemmi during
his tenure as SAC of the Boston Office. Tr. Day 14, at 53-54. He
stated that he had received no report that they were involved in
such activity. Id.
     37
       Soon after Fitzpatrick arrived in the Boston Office in 1981,
he met with Bulger and subsequently recommended to Lawrence
Sarhatt, the SAC of the Boston Office from 1980 until November
1982, that he be closed as an informant.       Fitzpatrick thought
Sarhatt agreed with him:

     I felt . . . that he went along with it. But whatever
     happened thereafter, there were other intervening cases,
     LCN, and so forth that intruded, and we went on with
     other stuff.

Tr. Day 8, at 17.      However, when Fitzpatrick made the same
recommendation to McWeeney, the FBI's Organized Crime Chief,
McWeeney "started telling me how valuable Mr. Bulger was." Id. at
21. Fitzpatrick understood that it was a Headquarters decision to
keep Bulger open. Id. at 25.

                                -34-
testified that the agents in the Boston Office treated him and

Bulger like colleagues, "'like we were FBI agents.'"              Id. at 91

n.65 (quoting Tr. June 6, 2006, at 93-94).

          Moreover, Connolly's disclosure of McIntyre's identity

was neither his first nor only leak of sensitive information, and

the FBI repeatedly was told of concerns that Connolly was a source

of leaked information.     In December 1976, Connolly learned that

Castucci had provided information to the FBI about the whereabouts

of two Winter Hill members.    He told Bulger, who promptly arranged

Castucci's    murder.   Id.   at   79.    The   Boston   Office    received

information from more than one source that Bulger and Flemmi had

killed Castucci, id., but apparently never asked Connolly if he

knew anything about the circumstances of the murder, id. at 80

n.44.

          We previously have described the concerns expressed by

local law enforcement authorities in Massachusetts and Florida

concerning leaks from the Boston Office and from Connolly in

particular.    Although this knowledge of local concerns went to the

highest levels of the FBI, the record shows no meaningful follow-

up, even after Halloran's explicit report that someone in the

Boston Office was leaking information to Bulger and Flemmi. Id. at

83 & n.49;38 see also id. at 95 n.71 (noting the concerns "as early


     38
       At trial, Agent Montanari testified that, despite Halloran's
report about a leak in the Boston Office during the time he was
investigating the murders, he did not believe anyone in the office

                                   -35-
as 1982 that Bulger and Flemmi might be obtaining information

concerning investigations of their criminal activities from the

Boston     Office   itself");    Tr.    Day     9,   at    39-40        (Fitzpatrick

testimony).       Fitzpatrick testified that he was informed by SAC

Sarhatt upon Fitzpatrick's arrival in Boston in 1981 that Connolly

and his supervisor, Morris, might have leaked information to Bulger

and   Flemmi   that    compromised      an    investigation        by    state   law

enforcement authorities.        Tr. Day 7, at 61.         Fitzpatrick also had

been told by FBI Assistant Director McKinnon, who was based at FBI

Headquarters, that there were problems in the Boston Office. Asked

at trial if he investigated whether Connolly was "the pipeline" for

Bulger and Flemmi, Fitzpatrick responded that "[i]t wasn't part of

the purview at that time.        That was not part of the investigation

at that time."      Tr. Day 9, at 40.

            Greenleaf, the SAC beginning in November 1982, testified

that he was not focused on the reports that Bulger and Flemmi had

sources    within   law   enforcement        generally    or   within      the   FBI,

although he was concerned that they were receiving information

about investigations into their activities.               Tr. Day 14, at 119.

He knew of no investigation being conducted in response to those

reports.    Id.




was improperly disclosing information. Tr. Day 13, at 110. He
said he did not give "any credence" to rumors from other police
agencies expressing distrust of Connolly. Id.

                                       -36-
            Instead,    as    the    other    law   enforcement       departments

expressed their concerns about Connolly's relationship with Bulger

and Flemmi, Connolly was being highly praised by his superiors for

his handling of informants.          As described supra, he consistently

was given the highest possible ratings for his overall performance

and his work with informants, even after questions arose about

whether he might be Bulger's and Flemmi's "pipeline."

            We recognize that not every agent in the FBI's Boston

Office condoned Connolly's tactics or ignored every allegation of

serious criminal behavior by Bulger and Flemmi.              To the contrary,

SAC Sarhatt looked into allegations of leaks related to a wiretap

in the late 1970s and, in a personal interview of Bulger, asked if

he had received any information from a member of the FBI.                 Bulger

responded negatively.         Id. at 83 n.49.       Fitzpatrick, who was in

charge of the C-3 Squad through the mid-1980s, testified that he

locked up investigative files on the Wheeler murder after Agents

Montanari and Brunnick expressed concerns that Connolly had been

rifling through the material and passing information along to

Bulger.     Tr. Day 7, at 21-24.39           Brunnick and Montanari amassed

substantial files on the Wheeler-Halloran-Donahue-Callahan murders

in   what   appears    to    have   been,    on   their   part,   a   good-faith

investigation that was frustrated by the Boston Office's collegial


      39
       Montanari testified that he never told Fitzpatrick about
Connolly rifling through his files and did not remember Brunnick
expressing such a concern. Tr. Day 13, at 89.

                                      -37-
relationship with Bulger and Flemmi.40            Supervisor Ring chastised

Connolly for being overly friendly with Bulger and Flemmi and

instructed him to stop meeting with informants at his own home.

Id. at 98; Tr. Day 16, at 76, 80 (Ring testimony).                      But such

discrete expressions of concern about Connolly's interactions with

the   pair   and    their   possible    involvement    in   serious     criminal

activity do not dispel the dominant impression created by the

record     that    the   FBI,   both   within   the   Boston   Office    and   at

Headquarters in Washington, engaged for years in a strategy that

gave Connolly wide berth in his interactions with Bulger and

Flemmi.

             The United States argues that, even conceding that the

FBI took some steps to preserve the flow of information from Bulger

and Flemmi, Connolly's disclosure of McIntyre's identity – leading

foreseeably to his death – was "dramatically different from all of

the other acts cited by the plaintiffs" and directly contrary to

the FBI's interests.        That assertion does not fairly reflect the

record.      As we have described, Connolly had revealed sensitive

information in the past, including the identity of informants. FBI

Headquarters knew that other law enforcement agencies suspected

Connolly of being the leak in the Boston Office, but it made no



      40
       The district court commented that "the investigation is more
notable for what was not done than for what was done," including
the absence of "serious interrogation of the prime suspects, Bulger
and Flemmi." Id. at 93.

                                       -38-
effort to seriously investigate the allegations or to terminate

Connolly's relationship with Bulger and Flemmi.    Unquestionably,

the disclosure at issue in this case was officially unauthorized

and forbidden.   However, it was not outside Connolly's customary

range of activity.   Even if we accept that the FBI's failure to

seriously investigate the allegations against Connolly, and to

instead praise his abilities, does not constitute tacit approval of

his methods, the agency's attitude at least reflects a judgment

that Connolly's at-the-edge conduct could be tolerated for the

greater good of bringing down La Cosa Nostra. McIntyre's death was

one of the consequences of that attitude.

          The United States argues that deeming Connolly's leak to

be within the scope of his employment leads inevitably to the

conclusion that Connolly also would have been acting within the

scope of his employment if he had shot McIntyre himself.      That

dramatic argument ignores the claim actually before us. Nothing in

this record suggests that Connolly committed acts of violence

himself that were condoned by the FBI.   By contrast, the leak of

McIntyre's identity fell within the range of activity that had

become customary for Connolly without reprisal from his superiors

-- despite their awareness that he may be engaging in such conduct.

At some point, unauthorized conduct will cross the line between

acts that fall within the employee's scope of employment and those

that are so far removed from the employer's methods and purposes


                               -39-
that they fall outside it.             The question here was where on the

spectrum to place Connolly's leak of McIntyre's identity.                  For the

reasons we have discussed, we hold that the scope of Connolly's

employment was broad enough to encompass this kind of conduct.

                2.    Prong Three: Motivation

                The   district   court    did    not   commit   clear     error   in

concluding that Connolly's favors to Bulger and Flemmi – including

his unauthorized disclosure of confidential information – were

motivated at least in part by a desire to advance the FBI's agenda.

See 447 F. Supp. 2d at 111.41            Through his connection with Bulger

and Flemmi, Connolly was able to simultaneously help the FBI

succeed in its efforts against LCN and help Bulger and Flemmi in

their        quest    to   control   organized    crime   in    Boston,    thereby

solidifying his status in both realms.                 Connolly received both

salary increases and monetary awards from the FBI on the basis of

his performance, which, as we have explained, was highly praised




        41
        After noting that he credited Flemmi's testimony that
Connolly received more than $200,000 in cash and gifts from Bulger
and Flemmi, the district court explicitly found that "Connolly was
motivated in part by greed and his friendship with Flemmi and
especially Bulger."    447 F. Supp. 2d at 111.     The court then
rejected the notion that Connolly's motivations were "purely
personal."   Id. (emphasis omitted).    Relying on its extensive
review of the decades-long history of Connolly's relationship with
the two men, the court stated: "For reasons already discussed, I
find that Connolly was motivated, at least in part, by a desire to
promote the FBI's goal of taking down Cosa Nostra through the use
of Bulger and Flemmi as informants." Id.

                                         -40-
because of his success in working with Bulger and Flemmi.                        Id. at

97.

            The government points out that the record contains no

direct evidence that Connolly intended to benefit the FBI by

revealing McIntyre's identity, and it emphasizes that every law

enforcement officer who testified stated that leaking informant

identity is always harmful to investigating agencies. However, the

district court did not have to find that identifying McIntyre was

itself in the FBI's interest. Providing Bulger and Flemmi with any

confidential     information      of     use    to    them    would   reinforce     the

relationship between Connolly and his informants and invite their

continued reciprocity with information about LCN.                      Thus, even if

Connolly understood that revealing an informant's identity might in

the   abstract   harm     the    FBI's    future      ability    to   recruit     other

informants, that does not diminish the immediate benefit Connolly

would    perceive   for    the    FBI    from    his    efforts       to   get   useful

information about LCN from these individuals.                   Such a cost-benefit

analysis seems particularly rational in the context of the FBI's

national priority to eliminate LCN.                  See id. at 62 (citing April

23, 1980 memo from FBI Director to Attorney General).

            Hence, the facts of this case are unlike those in the

cases cited by the government as examples of employee conduct that

is not fairly attributed to the employer.                    The circumstances here

are     easily   distinguishable,          for       example,     from      a    simple


                                         -41-
embezzlement, see In re American Biomaterials Corp., 954 F.2d 919,

924-25 (3d Cir. 1992), from a day care center employee's sexual

assault of children, Worcester Ins. Co. v. Fells Acres Day Sch.,

558 N.E.2d 958, 967 (Mass. 1990), and from the robbery and murder

of a courier by customs agents, Attallah v. United States, 955 F.2d

776, 781 (1st Cir. 1992).         In none of these cases is there a

plausible   theory   that   the   employee's   action    could   have   been

motivated in part by the employer's interests.          See 447 F. Supp.2d

at 111 n.96 (distinguishing Atallah and similar cases because

"there is no obvious way in which the employees' motivations would

overlap" with those of the employers).         Nor does the $200,000 in

money and gifts that Connolly received from Bulger and Flemmi

require a finding that the McIntyre leak was solely a personal

endeavor.    The record does not suggest that Connolly received

payments for particular tips, but rather that he received periodic

rewards as part of the ongoing relationship that the FBI expected

him to nurture.42    The district court therefore permissibly found

that the McIntyre disclosure was partially motivated by Connolly's

desire to maintain his relationship with Bulger and Flemmi in order

to further the FBI's effort to dismantle La Cosa Nostra.




     42
       Flemmi testified that he exchanged money and gifts with
multiple members of the C-3 Squad to maintain "goodwill and
protection." Tr. Day 2, at 93-104.

                                   -42-
           3. Conclusion on Scope of Employment

           In agreeing with the district court that the FBI is

responsible for McIntyre's death as the foreseeable consequence of

Connolly's leak, we do not suggest that such an outcome was desired

or even contemplated by Connolly's superiors.           Moreover, contrary

to the government's suggestion, this outcome is not a judgment

that the government's interests were in fact advanced by McIntyre's

murder.   Our conclusion, like the district court's, is only that

disclosure of McIntyre's identity was in keeping with both the

deferential treatment Bulger and Flemmi regularly received from all

levels of the FBI and the kind of conduct Connolly undertook on

other occasions with seeming acquiescence from his superiors.             As

such, it fell within the scope of his employment.

                                    III.

           The district court initially entered judgment in this

case without addressing post-judgment interest.             The plaintiffs

subsequently filed a motion under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure

59(e) seeking an amended judgment that included interest.                The

court granted the motion on March 14, 2007, stating that post-

judgment interest would run "only from the date a party seeking

recovery of interest files the judgment with the Secretary of the

Treasury until the judgment is paid."            The next day, the court

entered   an   amended   judgment   that   did   not   include   the   timing




                                    -43-
language, but which provided for post-judgment interest to accrue

at a rate of 5.05%.

          The United States then filed its own Rule 59 motion,

arguing that, under 31 U.S.C. § 1304(b)(1), it may be liable for

post-judgment   interest   "only   from    the   date   of   filing   of   the

transcript of the judgment with the Secretary of the Treasury

through the day before the date of the mandate of affirmance."             The

court denied the government's motion, and the government asks on

appeal that we explicitly hold that the statutory time period

applies to the accrual of interest.

          In a cross-appeal, the plaintiffs contend that the proper

post-judgment interest rate is 5.10% rather than the 5.05% rate

specified by the district court.     The government concedes that the

higher rate is correct, and the plaintiffs do not dispute that the

statutory time period applies.            Consequently, on remand, the

district court should revise its order with respect to post-

judgment interest accordingly.

          The judgment of the district court in favor of plaintiffs

is affirmed.    The case is remanded for entry of a corrected order

on post-judgment interest.    No costs are awarded.

          So ordered.




                                   -44-
