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Jimmy Hoffa's family still hopes his body will be found 50 years after the mafia-linked union boss disappeared without trace

Jimmy Hoffa's family still hopes his body will be found 50 years after the mafia-linked union boss disappeared without trace

Daily Mail​29-07-2025
Jimmy Hoffa's son still believes that his father's remains will someday be found.
'Sure, it's a long shot. But you hope against hope that maybe they'll come across something, anything that would bring us closure after all these years,' James Hoffa Jr., 84, told Daily Mail.
'You want to know what happened to your father.'
It was 50 years ago on Wednesday – July 30, 1975 – that the charismatic, yet controversial labor leader vanished from a suburban Detroit parking lot.
He was never seen again, at least publicly. His corpse has never been found despite countless searches. And nobody has ever been charged for his disappearance.
What happened to the once-powerful union boss became one of the late 20th century's most enduring mysteries – a whodunnit above which question marks linger to this day as law enforcement agencies and news outlets still receive tips about the location of his remains.
As recently as July 2022, for example, a deathbed statement of a man who in the late summer of 1975 worked at a landfill near the Pulaski Skyway in New Jersey prompted the FBI to dig for a steel drum the man said contained the labor leader's body parts. The pursuit came up empty.
Hoffa's disappearance and the mafia figures popularly suspected of causing it rattled the labor world, captured the imaginations of conspiracy theorists, became a punchline for comedians and captivated the nation from the mid to late 1970s.
A half-century later, it also still haunts his family.
'Thank you for remembering that sad time for us. But it hurts to talk about it,' his daughter, Barbara Crancer, 87, a retired judge in St. Louis, told Daily Mail. She referred questions to her brother in Michigan.
'It's still so emotional, so painful for us all,' said Hoffa Jr., who was a young union lawyer at the time of the disappearance and went on, like his dad, to lead the International Brotherhood of Teamsters from 1988 to 2022.
The elder James Riddle Hoffa was born in Indiana in 1913 and moved to Detroit, where he dropped out of school at the age of 14 to support his mother and three siblings after their father died in 1920.
His activism stemmed from his fury as a teenager about the low wages and poor labor conditions at the grocery company where he worked. He was 19 when he took a job as an organizer with his Teamsters local in Detroit.
Partly because of his efforts over the next several decades, the union representing American and Canadian truck drivers, warehouse workers and laborers in a variety of other freight-industry jobs grew from about 75,000 members in the early 1930s to about 1.5 million in the 1950s.
At that peak during the post-WWII economic boom, companies were rushing to deliver products to customers. Hoffa – whose presidency of the union lasted from 1957 to 1971 – built the union's power largely on what he called 'quickie strikes' that held up freight deliveries. Companies feared him, his strong-arm tactics, and the sway he seemed to have among workers.
Union brass credit him to this day with the job security and living standards of its members.
But Hoffa had many corruption scandals that also gave the Teamsters – and the labor movement in general – a black eye.
He was arrested in 1957 on allegations of trying to bribe an aide serving a US Senate committee investigating union practices.
Although cleared on those charges, he faced more arrests after US Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy vowed to root out organized crime, especially from the labor movement. Hoffa went to prison after convictions first for jury tampering, then for fraud by misusing the Teamsters' pension funds.
He tried leading the union from inside a federal prison but ultimately resigned as president as part of an agreement with President Richard Nixon, who commuted his sentence in 1971 on the condition that he not directly or indirectly manage any union for at least nine years.
Hoffa nevertheless tried to regain his presidency of the Teamsters in the mid-1970s despite pushback from the mafia, which by then had infiltrated the union.
On the day of his disappearance, he was scheduled for a 2pm meeting at the Machus Red Fox, an upscale eatery in the northern Detroit suburb of Bloomfield Township, with Anthony Giacalone, a purported kingpin in a Detroit-based mafia.
The FBI believes that Giacalone set up the appointment in hopes of brokering a reconciliation between Hoffa and Anthony Provenzano, a labor racketeer connected to the notorious Genovese crime family. Hoffa had met and been close with Provenzano in prison before the two had a bitter falling out.
Hoffa noted Giacolone's initials and the time and location of the appointment on his office calendar: 'TG-2pm-Red Fox.'
But the meeting never took place.
Hoffa called his wife, Josephine, from a nearby pay phone at about 2.30pm that afternoon to say the two mobsters had stood him up and that he would be home by 4pm.
His family contacted the police when he hadn't returned by the next morning.
A witness told detectives that Hoffa – whose years of union leadership had made him recognizable throughout metro Detroit – had left with some other people at about 2.50pm in the back of a maroon vehicle believed to be a Mercury Marquis Brougham, rather than in his own, which was still parked in the restaurant's lot.
Authorities ultimately took possession of that other car, which turned out to belong to Giacalone's son, Joseph, but was believed to be driven that day by Charles O'Brien, a union organizer who had been a close friend and protégé of Hoffa.
A police crime dog picked up Hoffa's scent. Detectives also recovered a strand of hair in the back seat that DNA testing in 2001 confirmed matched a sample from Hoffa's hairbrush.
Both Giacalone and Provenzano, who are long dead, had alibis for the afternoon of Hoffa's disappearance and denied having made the appointment at the Red Fox.
Local police, state police and the FBI received thousands of tips about Hoffa's fate, responding to some by digging up fields, a horse farm, driveways and landfills searching for signs of his remains.
The recovery efforts seemed so common in metro Detroit that locals would joke, 'They're looking for Jimmy,' at the mere sight of a track hoe.
Authorities declared Hoffa legally dead in 1982.
That same year, one of his associates told a Senate committee that Hoffa had been killed on Provenzano's orders, and that Provenzano's minions ground him up 'in little pieces,' which they 'shipped to Florida and tossed in a swamp.'
Donald 'Tony the Greek' Frankos, a purported mafia hitman, claimed to have been part of a group that dismembered Hoffa's corps e and buried it in cement at Giants Stadium in New Jersey.
Another theory surmised that Hoffa was killed near the restaurant where he was abducted and his body parts run through a shredding machine at a mob-owned garbage disposal company north of downtown Detroit. That plant burned down in an arson fire half a year later.
A mob lawyer claimed that Hoffa's remains were buried at the former Savannah Inn and Golf Country Club in Georgia. Another theory asserted that he was buried in the concrete foundation of General Motors' seven-tower, 73-story Renaissance Center in Detroit.
Frank 'The Irishman' Sheeran claimed to have taken part in killing Hoffa in Detroit, although prosecutors didn't buy his story and never prosecuted him. Sheeran's account was made famous by Martin Scorsese's 2019 Netflix film The Irishman, in which he was played by Robert De Niro.
Some theories speculated that Hoffa never disappeared at all but rather faked his own death and ran off to be with a mistress, or to avoid financial problems, or to escape threats from mafia families tied to the Teamsters.
Hoffa was declared legally dead in 1982. The theory prosecutors put forward during a 1975 grand jury was the mob had been raiding the Teamsters' pension fund and put a hit on Hoffa to stop him from going to police
Other theories surmised that the then leadership of the Teamsters ordered a hit on Hoffa to silence him.
The theory prosecutors put forward during a 1975 grand jury investigation was that the mob had been raiding the Teamsters' pension fund and put a hit on Hoffa to prevent him from disclosing it to authorities.
But prosecutors lacked conclusive evidence to charge anyone, causing hopes of ever solving Hoffa's disappearance to fade in the 1980s and 1990s. Although the case is inactive in Eastern Michigan's US Attorney's office, it is not officially closed.
Most of the named suspects – a list of mafia members or union operators with mob ties – have since died, and with them the long litany of late-night comedians' jokes about their gangster nicknames.
Meanwhile, the old-school and clubby Machus Red Fox restaurant closed in 1996 and reopened a year later as Andiamo, meaning 'Let's go' in Italian. Despite much urging, the new owner, restaurateur Joe Vicari chose against renaming the place after Hoffa, deeming that 'would be in bad taste.'
At one point in the ensuing decades, the restaurant did name a dish for the union boss – Aragosta alla Hoffa, a lobster tail in garlic butter sauce served with broccoli rabe and mushroom risotto.
The lore of Hoffa's disappearance lives on vintage matchbooks, swizzle sticks and ashtrays from the restaurant selling for high-dollar on Ebay, and in dozens of books, songs and movies about the mystery, as well as a video game.
Hoffa Jr. said he must have driven by the restaurant 'a thousand times' since his father's disappearance, but 'never had the stomach to go in.'
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