JIMMY
HOFFA
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James
Riddle Hoffa
was born on February 14th , 1913 and he disappeared on July 30th, 1975 and
was later declared
dead July
30, 1982.However, he was murdered years before that date. He was an
American labor union leader who served as the President
of the International
Brotherhood of Teamsters (IBT) union.
From an early age, Hoffa was a union activist and
became an important regional figure with the IBT by his mid-20s. By 1952 he was
national vice-president of the IBT, and was its general president between 1957
and 1971. He secured the first national agreement for teamsters' rates in 1964
with the National Master Freight Agreement. He played a major role in the growth and development
of the union, which eventually became the largest (by membership) in the United
States with over 2.3 million members at its peak, during his terms as its
leader.
Hoffa became involved with organized crime from the early years of his
Teamsters work, and this connection continued until his disappearance in 1975.
He was convicted of jury tampering, attempted bribery and fraud in 1964.
On December 23rd ,
1971, less than five years into his 13-year sentence, Hoffa was released from
prison when President Richard Nixon commuted his
sentence to time served. Following his release, Hoffa was awarded a Teamsters'
pension of $1.7 million, delivered in a one-time lump sum payment. This type of
pension settlement had not occurred before with the Teamsters,
The IBT then endorsed President
Nixon, a Republican,
in his presidential re-election bid in 1972;
in prior elections, the union had supported Democratic nominees
but had also endorsed Nixon in 1960.
While
he was glad to regain his freedom, Hoffa was very disappointed with the condition
imposed on his release by President Nixon, which prevented Hoffa from engaging
in union activities until March 1980. He accused senior Nixon
Administration figures, including Attorney General John N. Mitchell and White
House Special Counsel Charles Colson, of depriving him
of his rights by imposing this condition; Mitchell and Colson both denied this.
It was probably imposed upon Hoffa as the result of requests from the
Teamsters' leadership although Fitzsimmons also denied this.
Hoffa
sued to invalidate the non-participation restriction in order to reassert his
power over the Teamsters. John Dean, former White House counsel to President
Nixon, was among those called upon for depositions in 1974 court proceedings. Dean,
who had become famous as a government witness in prosecutions arising from
the Watergate scandal by mid-1973,
had drafted the non-participation clause in 1971 at Nixon's request. Hoffa
ultimately lost his court battle, since the court ruled that Nixon had acted
within his powers by imposing the restriction, as it was based on Hoffa's
misconduct while serving as a Teamsters' official.
. Hoffa
faced immense resistance to his re-establishment of power from many corners and
had lost much of his earlier support, even in the Detroit area. As a result, he
intended to begin his comeback at the local level with Local 299 in Detroit,
where he retained some influence. In 1975, Hoffa was working on his autobiography titled Hoffa: The Real Story, which was
published a few months after his disappearance. He had earlier published a book
titled The Trials of Jimmy Hoffa (1970)
Hoffa's
plans to regain the leadership of the union were met with opposition from some
members of the Mafia, including some who would be connected to his
1975 disappearance. One of them was Anthony Provenzano, who had previously
been a Teamster local leader in New Jersey and a national vice-president of the
union during Hoffa's second term as its president. Provenzano had once been a
friend of Hoffa but had since become his enemy. sHoffa had called Provenzano
"crazy.” In 1973 and 1974, Hoffa talked to him to ask for help in
supporting him for his return to power. Provenzano refused to listen and
threatened Hoffa by saying he would pull out his guts and kidnap his
granddaughters.
Hoffa
could not afford to take these threats lightly. At east two of Provenzano's
political opponents were believed to have been murdered on hos orders. Others
who had spoken out against him had been physically assaulted. According
to Dan Moldea, Hoffa had retaliated against his Mafia
opponents by cooperating with investigations against them. That was a really
stupid thing to do.
Other Mafia figures who became involved were Anthony Giacalone, an alleged kingpin
in the Detroit Mafia, and his younger
brother, Vito. In a short space
of time, the brothers had made three visits to Hoffa's home at Lake Orion and one to the Guardian
Building law offices. Their avowed purpose in meeting Hoffa was to set up a
"peace meeting" between Provenzano and Hoffa. According to Hoffa's
son, "Dad was pushing so hard to get back in office, I was increasingly
afraid that the mob would do something about it." Hoffa's son viewed the
"peace meeting" overture as a pretext, and was convinced that
Giacalone was "setting Dad up" for a hit. Hoffa himself was becoming
increasingly uneasy each time that the Giacalone brothers arrived to talk with
him.
Hoffa disappeared on July 30th , 1975 after going
out to a meeting with Anthony Provenzano and Anthony Giacalone. The meeting was
arranged to take place at 2 p.m. at the
Machus Red Fox restaurant in Bloomfield
Township, a suburb of Detroit. The restaurant was known to Hoffa
since it had been the site for the
wedding reception of his son, James. Hoffa wrote the date in his office
calendar, "TG — 2 P.M. — Red Fox"
On July 30, Hoffa left home in his green Pontiac Grand Ville at 1:15 p.m. Before heading to the
restaurant, he stopped in Pontiac at the office of his close friend Louis Linteau,
a former president of Teamsters Local 614 in Pontiac who now ran a limousine
service. Linteau and Hoffa had been enemies early in their respective careers,
but had since settled their differences. By the time Hoffa left prison, Linteau
had also become Hoffa's unofficial appointment secretary (he had arranged the
dinner meeting between Hoffa and the Giacalone brothers on July 26th,
where they had informed him of the July 30 sit-down). Linteau was out to lunch
when Hoffa stopped by, so he talked to some of the staff present and left a
message for Linteau before departing for the Machus Red Fox Restaruant.
At 2:15 p.m., an annoyed Hoffa
called his wife from a payphone on a post in front of Damman
Hardware, directly behind the Red Fox,
and complained, "Where the hell is Tony Giacalone? I'm being stood
up." His wife told him that she had not heard from
anyone. He told her he would be home at 4 p.m. Several eyewitnesses saw
Hoffa standing by his car and pacing the restaurant's parking lot.
Two men saw Hoffa emerge from the Red Fox
after a long lunch and recognized him; they stopped to chat with him briefly
and to shake his hand. At 3:27 p.m., Hoffa called Linteau complaining
that Giacalone was late.[
Hoffa said, "That dirty son of a bitch Tony Jocks set this meeting
up, and he's an hour and a half late." Linteau told him to calm down, and
to stop by his office on the way home. Hoffa said that he would and hung up.
This was Hoffa's last known communication with anyone.
\I saw a movie about Hoffa ad the movie
ended when two men arrived at the restaraut and one of them went into the
restaurant and the second one walked to the car that Hoffa was sitting in the
back seat.
I thought
that Hoffa was going to be shot right then and there but in fact he
wasn’t killed then, The last scene was the car being driven into a large
transport truck and being driven away. Thatwas not what happened.
For
years, I had no idea when and where he was killed or by whom. Now I know.
At 7 a.m. the next day, Hoffa's wife called her son and daughter by
telephone, saying that their father had not come home. On her way to the house,
Hoffa's daughter claimed to have had a vision of her father, who she was
already sure he was dead. In her vision, her father wasslumped over, wearing a dark-colored
short-sleeved polo shirt.
At 7:20 am, Linteau went to the Machus Red Fox, and found Hoffa's
unlocked car in the parking lot, but there was no sign of Hoffa or any
indication of what had happened to him. He called the police, who later arrived
at the scene. State police were
brought in and the FBI was alerted. At suppertime,
Hoffa's son, James P. Hoffa, filed a missing persons report.
After years of extensive investigation, involving numerous law
enforcement agencies including the FBI, officials have not reached a definitive
conclusion as to Hoffa's fate and who was involved. Giacalone and Provenzano,
who denied having scheduled a meeting with Hoffa, were found not to have been
near the restaurant that afternoon. Hoffa was declared legally dead on July 30, 1982. The
case continued to be the subject of rumor and speculation. .
Hoffa's wife, Josephine, died on
September 12, 1980. According to her children, she died of the fear and grief
caused by the 1975 disappearance of her husband. Her health had declined
steadily after that. She died and is entombed in Michigan.
In his book, I Heard You Paint Houses: Frank "The Irishman"
Sheeran and the Closing of the Case on Jimmy Hoffa (2004),
author Charles Brandt claims that Frank Sheeran, a professional killer for the mob
and longtime friend of Hoffa's, confessed to assassinating him. According to
Brandt, O'Brien drove Sheeran, Hoffa, and fellow mobster Sal Briguglio to a
house in Detroit. He claimed that while O'Brien and Briguglio drove off, Sheeran
and Hoffa went into the house, where Sheeran claims that he shot Hoffa twice
behind the right ear, and that he was told that Hoffa was cremated after the
murder. Further, Sheeran also admitted later to reporters that he murdered Hoff
and yet, blood stains found in the
Detroit house where Sheeran claimed the murder happened were
determined not to match Hoffa's blood.
On June 16th, 2006, the Detroit Free Press published in its
entirety the so-called "Hoffex Memo," a 56-page report prepared by
the FBI for a January 1976 briefing on the case at FBI Headquarters in
Washington. Although not claiming conclusively to establish the specifics of
his disappearance, the memo records a belief that Hoffa was murdered at the
behest of organized crime figures, who regarded his efforts to regain power
within the Teamsters as a threat to their control of the union's pension fund.
In Philip Carlo's book The Iceman: Confessions of a
Mafia Contract Killer (2006), Richard Kuklinski claimed to
know the fate of Hoffa. His body was
placed in a 50-gallon drum and set on fire for "a half hour or so,"
then the drum was welded shut and buried in a junkyard. Later, according to
Kuklinski, an accomplice started to talk to federal authorities. Because of
fear that he would use the information to try to get out of trouble, the
perpetrators had the drum dug up, placed in the trunk of a car, and compacted
to a 4 × 2 foot syeel rectangular cuboid. It was sold, along
with hundreds of compacted cars, as scrap metal. This material was later shipped
to Japan to be used in
making new cars.
In a first-season episode of the TV Discovery Channel MythBusters, titled "The
Hunt for Hoffa," the locations in Giants Stadium where Hoffa
was rumored to be buried were scanned with a ground
penetrating radar. This was intended to reveal if any
disturbances indicated a human body had been buried there. They found no trace
of any human remains. In addition, no human remains were found when Giants
Stadium was demolished in 2010.
In 2012, Roseville, Michigan,
police took samples from the ground under a suburban Detroit driveway after a
person reported having witnessed the burial of a body there around the time of
Hoffa's 1975 disappearance.[54] Tests by Michigan State
University anthropologists found no evidence of
human remains.
In January 2013,
reputed gangster Tony Zerilli implied
that Hoffa was originally buried in a shallow grave, with the plan to move his
remains later to a second location. Zerilli contends that these plans were
abandoned. He said that Hoffa's remains lay in a field in northern Oakland County,
Michigan, not far from the restaurant where he was last seen.
Zerilli denied any responsibility for or association with Hoffa's
disappearance. On June 17, 2013, investigation of the Zerilli information led
the FBI to a property in Oakland
Township in northern Oakland County owned by Detroit mob
boss Jack Tocco. After three days, the FBI
called off the dig. No human remains were found, and the case stll remains open
James Buccellato, a professor of
Criminology and Criminal Justice at Northern
Arizona University, suggested in 2017 that Hoffa was likely murdered
one mile away from the restaurant at the house of Carlo Licata, the son of
mobster Nick Licata.
He further suggested that Hoffa's body was taken to a crematorium in Detroit that was owned
at the time by the Mafia. He was doubtful that the body was transported a long
distance, saying "It’s just not practical."
Thomas Andretta, who died in 2019, and his
brother Stephen, who reportedly died of cancer in 2000, were named by the FBI
as suspects. Both were New Jersey Teamsters and reputed Genovese crime
family mob associates. The FBI called Thomas Andretta a
"trusted associate of Anthony Provenzano;
reported to be involved in the disappearance of Hoffa."[60] Andretta served federal
prison time for racketeering.
He repeatedly refused to comment on the case.
In
an April 2019 interview, with DJ Vlad, Michael Franzese said he was aware of the
location of Hoffa's body, as well as the shooter. Franzese said Hoffa was
definitely killed in a mafia-related hit, and that the order came down from the
commission in New York. When questioned about the location and the shooter,
Franzese said, "I can tell you the body is very wet," and "The
shooter is still alive today, but currently in prison.” Very wet?
Was it dumped in a lake, a river or the ocean?
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