May 12, 2016
May 15, 2024
James
Hoffa
111
62
65 inches
180 lbs
White / Caucasian
Male
On a summer afternoon in Michigan, July 30, 1975, the 62-year-old former Teamsters president, James Riddle Hoffa, known to most as Jimmy Hoffa, was preparing for a pivotal meeting. He was last seen that day in Bloomfield Township, a suburb of Detroit. Hoffa had told his family he was on his way to the Machus Red Fox restaurant for a 2:00 p.m. appointment with two men: Anthony "Tony Jack" Giacalone, a reputed Detroit mob enforcer, and Anthony "Tony Pro" Provenzano, a New Jersey Teamsters official with alleged ties to the Mafia. At about 2:15 p.m., Hoffa called his wife, Josephine, from a payphone to tell her that the men he was supposed to meet had not arrived. That was the last time anyone is known to have heard from him. His unlocked car was found in the restaurant's parking lot the next morning, but there was no sign of Hoffa himself. The investigation into Hoffa's disappearance quickly became one of the most extensive and perplexing in American history. The FBI was brought in, and a significant reward was offered by the Hoffa family for any information. It was widely believed that his disappearance was connected to his efforts to regain power within the Teamsters union. After serving time in prison for jury tampering, fraud, and attempted bribery, President Richard Nixon had commuted his sentence with the condition that he not participate in union activities until 1980. Hoffa, however, was actively trying to overturn this restriction and reclaim his position as president, a move that likely angered his former allies in organized crime who preferred his successor, Frank Fitzsimmons. Both Giacalone and Provenzano, the men Hoffa was scheduled to meet, denied ever having a meeting set up with him and were found to not have been near the restaurant that afternoon. Over the years, countless theories and leads have emerged, yet none have led to a definitive answer about what happened to Jimmy Hoffa. The FBI has pursued numerous tips, leading to searches of various locations, including a field in Oakland Township and a former landfill site in New Jersey, but his remains have never been found. In 1982, seven years after he was last seen, Jimmy Hoffa was declared legally dead. The case officially remains unsolved, a haunting story of a powerful figure who vanished without a trace. The prevailing belief among investigators and the public is that he was murdered by the Mafia to prevent his return to the leadership of the Teamsters. Despite the passage of time and the deaths of many of the key figures involved, the disappearance of Jimmy Hoffa continues to be a subject of intense public fascination and speculation, a stark reminder of the shadowy connections between organized labor and the criminal underworld in 20th-century America.
Jul 30, 1975
Bloomfield Hills
Michigan
Oakland County
48301
No
18331
Bloomfield Township Police Department
Bloomfield Hills
Michigan
Oakland County
48302
4200 Telegraph Rd, Michigan
2484337755
Local
Law Enforcement
75-3425
Bloomfield Township Police Department
Gray or Partially Gray
Blue
Blue
No
06/01/2026