MI MI - James 'Jimmy' Hoffa, 62, Bloomfield Hills, 30 July 1975


Nestled away in the basement of FBI headquarters in Detroit, up on blocks in a storage locker, gathering dust going on its fifth decade, sits the lone piece of physical evidence recovered in the still-unsolved Jimmy Hoffa murder case – a 1975 burgundy Mercury Marquis Brougham.

It once belonged to reputed Motor City mobster, Joseph (Joey Jack) Giacalone, the son of the No. 1 suspect in the long-running investigation into the iconic labor leader’s disappearance and execution, deceased Midwest mafia don Anthony (Tony Jack) Giacalone.

Hoffa, the relentless former Teamsters president, was killed 40 years ago (2015 article) this month after butting heads with the mafia regarding his plans to reclaim his post atop labor-union politics following a four-year prison term...

LINK:

Detroit Wiseguy Joey Jack's Car Is Only Piece Of Evidence In Hoffa Investigation - The Gangster Report
 
00hoffa-articleLarge.jpg

The site in Jersey City where it is believed the F.B.I. visited as part of its investigation into the disappearance of the union boss Jimmy Hoffa.Credit...Bryan Anselm for The New York Times

Search for Jimmy Hoffa Leads the F.B.I. to Jersey City Landfill
''A deathbed statement by a man who claimed to bury the Teamster boss’ body in a steel drum brought agents to the site for an inspection.''
Nov. 19, 2021, 11:59 a.m. ET
''The disappearance of Jimmy Hoffa, a mystery that has gripped the American imagination for half a century on its ascent to national folklore, is the subject of a new F.B.I. investigation centered on the site of a former landfill in Jersey City. A worker, on his deathbed, said he buried the body underground in a steel drum.

F.B.I. agents armed with a search warrant arrived in Jersey City at a plot of dirt and gravel the size of a Little League diamond below the Pulaski Skyway on Oct. 25 and 26 to conduct a “site survey,” according to the Detroit field office, which has led the investigation into Mr. Hoffa’s disappearance in 1975. The steel drum is said to be buried about 15 feet below ground, in the shadow of countless millions of drivers who have passed it by.

“F.B.I. personnel from the Newark and Detroit field offices completed the survey and that data is currently being analyzed,” Special Agent Mara R. Schneider, a spokeswoman, said on Thursday. The formal statement did not mention Mr. Hoffa by name and did not elaborate on a timeline for any potential excavation.''
 
Search for Jimmy Hoffa's body leads to Jersey City landfill (nbcnews.com)

New hope that a nearly 50-year mystery could soon be solved.

...“Last month, the FBI obtained a search warrant to conduct a site survey underneath the Pulaski Skyway," Special Agent Mara Schneider of the FBI's Detroit field office said. "That data is currently being analyzed. Because the affidavit in support of the search warrant was sealed by the court, we are unable to provide any additional information.”...
 

Jimmy Hoffa and the continuing search for him...

A chronology of events in the disappearance of Jimmy Hoffa, former president of the Teamsters union:

July 30, 1975

— Hoffa leaves his Lake Orion home about 1 p.m. and makes a stop to visit a friend in Pontiac. He arrives around 2 p.m. at the Machus Red Fox restaurant in Oakland County’s Bloomfield Township to meet reputed Detroit mob enforcer Anthony “Tony Jack” Giacalone and alleged New Jersey mob figure Anthony “Tony Pro” Provenzano. Hoffa calls his wife, Josephine, about 2:15 p.m. from a pay phone and tells her no one showed up for his meeting. The 62-year-old Hoffa never is seen or heard from again.

Aug. 8, 1975

— The FBI gets a search warrant for Hoffa's car, which was found in the restaurant parking lot. They find fingerprints of family friend Charles “Chuckie” O’Brien on a 7-Up bottle under the right front seat.

Sept. 2, 1975

— A grand jury convenes in Detroit to investigate the Hoffa disappearance.

1975-85

— More than 200 FBI agents are assigned to the case in New Jersey, Detroit and at least four other cities. During the period, more than 70 volumes of files are compiled, containing more than 16,000 pages. Six suspects in the disappearance, including Provenzano and Anthony Giacalone, are convicted on unrelated charges.

— 1982: Self-described mafia murderer Charles Allen, who served prison time with Hoffa and participated in the federal witness-protection program, tells a U.S. Senate committee that Hoffa was killed at Provenzano’s orders. Hoffa’s body was “ground up in little pieces, shipped to Florida and thrown into a swamp,” Allen said.

1982

— Hoffa is declared legally dead.

1989

— Self-described hit man Donald “Tony the Greek” Frankos claims Hoffa is buried under Giants Stadium in East Rutherford, N.J. The FBI finds no evidence to support the claim.

June 2001

— The head of the FBI’s organized-crime unit says in a court document that he believes a decision whether to prosecute anyone could be made in the next two years.

March 2002

— The FBI says it will refer the case to the Oakland County prosecutor’s office for possible state charges. John Bell, special agent in charge of the FBI’s Detroit bureau, says the federal case was stymied because of the length of time since Hoffa disappeared.

Aug. 29, 2002

— Oakland County prosecutor says new DNA evidence in Hoffa’s disappearance is insufficient to bring criminal charges.

May 2004

— Bloomfield Township police rip up the floorboards from a Detroit house where one-time Hoffa ally Frank Sheeran claims to have killed him. The FBI crime lab would ultimately conclude that the blood found on the floorboards was not Hoffa’s.

April 2006

— New Jersey mob hit man Richard “The Iceman” Kuklinski, who died in March, claims that he killed Hoffa and put his body in a car that was sold as scrap metal. Kuklinski’s book, “The Ice Man: Confessions of a Mafia Contract Killer,” contends he received $40,000 for the slaying.

May 17, 2006

— The FBI begins searching a horse farm in Oakland County’s Milford Township, northwest of Detroit for Hoffa’s remains, but ends the search after finding nothing.

June 17, 2013

— The FBI sees enough merit in a reputed Mafia captain’s tip to once again break out the digging equipment to search for Hoffa’s remains in an Oakland Township field, about 25 miles north of Detroit. No remains of Hoffa are found

Nov. 19, 2021

— FBI says it obtained a search warrant to “conduct a site survey underneath the Pulaski Skyway" in New Jersey in an effort to find Hoffa body.

LINKS:

FBI investigating old NJ landfill for Jimmy Hoffa's remains

FBI searched under New Jersey bridge for Jimmy Hoffa's remains last month - CNN

Events in disappearance of former Teamsters head Jimmy Hoffa
 
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From junkyards to Jersey, some Jimmy Hoffa theories (detroitnews.com)

Detroit — The FBI’s confirmation last week that it was looking at a spot near a New Jersey landfill as the possible burial site of former Teamsters boss Jimmy Hoffa is the latest development in a search that began when he disappeared in 1975.

A number of theories have emerged about Hoffa since he was reported missing, though many of them have been tied to book releases. From serious to scurrilous, here are some of the best...
 

Jimmy Hoffa and the continuing search for him...

A chronology of events in the disappearance of Jimmy Hoffa, former president of the Teamsters union:

July 30, 1975

— Hoffa leaves his Lake Orion home about 1 p.m. and makes a stop to visit a friend in Pontiac. He arrives around 2 p.m. at the Machus Red Fox restaurant in Oakland County’s Bloomfield Township to meet reputed Detroit mob enforcer Anthony “Tony Jack” Giacalone and alleged New Jersey mob figure Anthony “Tony Pro” Provenzano. Hoffa calls his wife, Josephine, about 2:15 p.m. from a pay phone and tells her no one showed up for his meeting. The 62-year-old Hoffa never is seen or heard from again.

Aug. 8, 1975

— The FBI gets a search warrant for Hoffa's car, which was found in the restaurant parking lot. They find fingerprints of family friend Charles “Chuckie” O’Brien on a 7-Up bottle under the right front seat.

Sept. 2, 1975

— A grand jury convenes in Detroit to investigate the Hoffa disappearance.

1975-85

— More than 200 FBI agents are assigned to the case in New Jersey, Detroit and at least four other cities. During the period, more than 70 volumes of files are compiled, containing more than 16,000 pages. Six suspects in the disappearance, including Provenzano and Anthony Giacalone, are convicted on unrelated charges.

— 1982: Self-described mafia murderer Charles Allen, who served prison time with Hoffa and participated in the federal witness-protection program, tells a U.S. Senate committee that Hoffa was killed at Provenzano’s orders. Hoffa’s body was “ground up in little pieces, shipped to Florida and thrown into a swamp,” Allen said.

1982

— Hoffa is declared legally dead.

1989

— Self-described hit man Donald “Tony the Greek” Frankos claims Hoffa is buried under Giants Stadium in East Rutherford, N.J. The FBI finds no evidence to support the claim.

June 2001

— The head of the FBI’s organized-crime unit says in a court document that he believes a decision whether to prosecute anyone could be made in the next two years.

March 2002

— The FBI says it will refer the case to the Oakland County prosecutor’s office for possible state charges. John Bell, special agent in charge of the FBI’s Detroit bureau, says the federal case was stymied because of the length of time since Hoffa disappeared.

Aug. 29, 2002

— Oakland County prosecutor says new DNA evidence in Hoffa’s disappearance is insufficient to bring criminal charges.

May 2004

— Bloomfield Township police rip up the floorboards from a Detroit house where one-time Hoffa ally Frank Sheeran claims to have killed him. The FBI crime lab would ultimately conclude that the blood found on the floorboards was not Hoffa’s.

April 2006

— New Jersey mob hit man Richard “The Iceman” Kuklinski, who died in March, claims that he killed Hoffa and put his body in a car that was sold as scrap metal. Kuklinski’s book, “The Ice Man: Confessions of a Mafia Contract Killer,” contends he received $40,000 for the slaying.

May 17, 2006

— The FBI begins searching a horse farm in Oakland County’s Milford Township, northwest of Detroit for Hoffa’s remains, but ends the search after finding nothing.

June 17, 2013

— The FBI sees enough merit in a reputed Mafia captain’s tip to once again break out the digging equipment to search for Hoffa’s remains in an Oakland Township field, about 25 miles north of Detroit. No remains of Hoffa are found

Nov. 19, 2021

— FBI says it obtained a search warrant to “conduct a site survey underneath the Pulaski Skyway" in New Jersey in an effort to find Hoffa body.

LINKS:

FBI investigating old NJ landfill for Jimmy Hoffa's remains

FBI searched under New Jersey bridge for Jimmy Hoffa's remains last month - CNN

Events in disappearance of former Teamsters head Jimmy Hoffa

I’m surprised they spent money to do this. It seems highly unlikely that mobsters would kill him in a Detroit suburb, then drive his body halfway across the country to bury or dispose of it.
 
I’m surprised they spent money to do this. It seems highly unlikely that mobsters would kill him in a Detroit suburb, then drive his body halfway across the country to bury or dispose of it.
I swear money is made off of these digs:

  1. Someone writes a book: "Hoffa is buried here"
  2. Cops agree to dig up area because author promises them a cut of the proceeds from book sales...MOO..(I'm just making this up)
  3. Books sell..
  4. Cops get some extra money
  5. Everyone is happy except us.
  6. Lather, rinse, repeat
 
I swear money is made off of these digs:

  1. Someone writes a book: "Hoffa is buried here"
  2. Cops agree to dig up area because author promises them a cut of the proceeds from book sales...MOO..(I'm just making this up)
  3. Books sell..
  4. Cops get some extra money
  5. Everyone is happy except us.
  6. Lather, rinse, repeat

I wonder if they use the Hoffa searches as a training or refresher class for agents? Each place they search for Hoffa is different. Not a bad idea. Much the same as when someone donates an old house or building to the local fire department so they can practice firefighting skills. Just a guess, I have no idea.

JMO, they didn't take Hoffa very far from where he was abducted. Once LE was alerted that he was missing, they would have known which suspects to look for. It's not like Hoffa's enemies were not known. I've always wondered, if these guys (Giacalone, etc.) were organized crime, they would already be under surveillance by FBI.
 
I wonder if they use the Hoffa searches as a training or refresher class for agents? Each place they search for Hoffa is different. Not a bad idea. Much the same as when someone donates an old house or building to the local fire department so they can practice firefighting skills. Just a guess, I have no idea.

JMO, they didn't take Hoffa very far from where he was abducted. Once LE was alerted that he was missing, they would have known which suspects to look for. It's not like Hoffa's enemies were not known. I've always wondered, if these guys (Giacalone, etc.) were organized crime, they would already be under surveillance by FBI.
The searches may be privately funded which are offset by profits from publicity.

Who knows? It always seems that someone writes a book and suddenly they are searching....

I think Jimmy was probably put in a wood chipper probably north of Detroit and we will never find him..
Although Mafia was under surveillance, methods weren't as good as today.

They were the prime suspects at the time.
There was a vehicle with blood found at the time. (I heard this over the dinner table and maybe read about it) They claimed it was fish blood HOFFA CASE STAIN CALLED FISH BLOOD (Published 1975)


When investigators examined the car, they learned that O’Brien had borrowed it for the day from Giacalone’s son. And they found hair strands and small quantities of blood in it. DNA Yields Clue in Jimmy Hoffa Disappearance

One source say police dogs detected his scent in the Mercury in the backseat and the trunk.https://www.nytimes.com/1975/08/28/archives/hoffa-presence-in-car-is-hinted-scent-reportedly-found-in-auto-used.html

He's like Amelia Earhart and DB Cooper..
I think the FBI knows who did this, they just can't prove it, so we sit in rumorland.
 
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He's like Amelia Earhart and DB Cooper..
I think the FBI knows who did this, they just can't prove it, so we sit in rumorland.

I agree. The FBI knows who did this. It somehow slipped under their radar. They were doing some wiretapping, surveillance and had some undercover people who infiltrated the Mafia, but IIRC, they were mostly focused on New York, Florida and Las Vegas. It was around this time (1975) when the Mafia was heavily in control of casinos in Las Vegas.

I recently watched the documentary "Fear City" on Netflix. It was about the FBI's plan to take down the 5 families in NYC. Wiretapping was used extensively, but it was still difficult to do. They had to get search warrants, etc. That would have been difficult to do in Hoffa's case unless they had some solid evidence that Hoffa was going to be kidnapped. Wiring cars was difficult, even if you could get a SW, all the bad guys had to do was search cars to find the bugs.

Still, I would have thought they would have been tailing Hoffa. Maybe not.
 
The disappearance of Jimmy Hoffa is one of the most famous unsolved cases in Michigan history.

Jimmy Hoffa disappeared from an Oakland County restaurant on July 30, 1975. Investigators have searched numerous locations and have sorted through countless tips for the last 48 years.

His story is a complicated one. He was a Union man and he helped create stability and strength in America’s workforce. He made enemies in the U.S. government and made friends with some of the notorious gangsters of the time...
 
48 years missing...


James "Jimmy" Hoffa, age 62, Missing since 30 July 1975

LINK:

Seems to me that it’d be rather irresponsible for them to announce “who they think did it,” when they don’t have the evidence to prove it. Sure, it’d make a good story….

MOO
 
Seems to me that it’d be rather irresponsible for them to announce “who they think did it,” when they don’t have the evidence to prove it. Sure, it’d make a good story….

MOO
And if the FBI was to say who did it - could anyone believe them?
 
He's everywhere and nowhere!!!


I'm not holding my breath!!

I think he WAS where they said he was but they got there to late ,i believe him to be right here at this link . IMO. I have had a friend submit this .NJ - NJ - Tinton Falls, UnkSex/UnkRace/Adult. UP12124. Skull in landfill, distinctive scar. August 1976.

They sent back an email saying they were fowarding information to Namus and to the investigators.
Does anyone know if they do that for every missing person cases where a possible match is submitted ?

Additionaly to the very few things listed on namus that make this look very promising for being Hoffa, is a podcast from 2021 I believe which explains the scar on Hoffas head and how he got it . 12 minutes in the pod cast they mention an incident .
 
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