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How Jimmy Hoffa was Killed | 25:10
Serial Killers Documentaries | 740K subscribers | 134K views | 1 year ago
How Jimmy Hoffa was Killed | 25:10 | Serial Killers Documentaries | 740K subscribers | 134K views | 1 year ago


Transcript
0:14·On July 30, 1975, former Teamsters President Jimmy Hoffa stood outside the Machus Red Fox
0:21·Restaurant in Bloomfield Township, Michigan, impatiently scanning the parking lot.
0:26·The man who had made the Teamsters the most formidable labor union in the country was
0:30·already angry.
0:32·It was quarter after two in the afternoon, and the men he was supposed to be meeting
0:35·for lunch hadn't arrived yet.
0:38·Hoffa was a stickler for punctuality, and it was his understanding that they were to
0:41·meet at 2:00.
0:43·Wearing a dark blue short-sleeve shirt, blue pants, white socks, and black Gucci loafers,
0:49·Hoffa walked to a nearby payphone outside a hardware store and called his wife to tell
0:53·her that he'd apparently been stood up.
0:55·Josephine Hoffa had felt that her husband seemed uncharacteristically nervous when he
0:59·had left the house an hour earlier.
1:02·Before going to the restaurant, Hoffa had stopped at the offices of a limousine service
1:05·in Pontiac that was owned by a good friend.
1:08·An employee there also noticed that Hoffa seemed nervous.
1:12·Jimmy Hoffa was supposed to be meeting Detroit mobster Anthony "Tony Jack" Giacalone and
1:17·New Jersey labor leader Anthony "Tony Pro" Provenzano, who also happened to be a made
1:23·member of the Genovese crime family.
1:26·The reason for this meeting, Hoffa believed, was to discuss his intention to run for the
1:30·presidency of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters and regain the powerful position
1:34·he had lost after his 1964 convictions for jury tampering, conspiracy, and mail and wire
1:40·fraud.
1:41·But the Mafia, who had worked hand in hand with Hoffa in the past, wasn't so sure they
1:46·wanted him back in power.
1:49·President Richard Nixon had granted Hoffa clemency in 1971, just before Christmas, but
1:54·things had changed significantly in the nearly five years Hoffa had spent behind bars.
1:59·The mob found Hoffa's handpicked successor, Frank Fitzsimmons, more pliable than Hoffa,
2:04·and Fitzsimmons was well-liked by President Nixon.
2:08·The gangsters liked things the way they were.
2:10·They wanted Hoffa to stay retired.
2:13·Not long after Hoffa had called home on the payphone outside the hardware store, a maroon
2:17·1975 Mercury Marquis Brougham pulled out of the restaurant parking lot and nearly hit
2:22·a truck.
2:24·The truck driver, who was making deliveries in the area, pulled up next to the car and
2:28·immediately recognized Jimmy Hoffa sitting in the backseat behind the car's driver.
2:33·The truck driver also noticed a long object covered with a gray blanket on the seat between
2:38·Hoffa and another passenger.
2:40·The truck driver thought it was a shotgun or a rifle.
2:43·He didn't get a good look at anyone else in the car.
2:46·The next day Hoffa's green 1974 Pontiac Grand Ville was found unlocked in the restaurant
2:52·parking lot.
2:53·Police opened the trunk but found nothing unusual.
2:56·Using the truck driver's description of the car Hoffa was last seen in, investigators
3:00·were able to trace the maroon Mercury to its owner, Joe Giacalone, the son of mobster Anthony
3:06·Giacalone.
3:08·Joe Giacalone claimed that he had lent the car to a friend that day, a teamster named
3:12·Charles "Chuckie" O'Brien, who was very close to the Hoffa family and had actually lived
3:17·with the Hoffas at one time.
3:19·The car was located, and O'Brien's fingerprints were found on a 7UP bottle and a piece of
3:24·paper recovered from the car.
3:26·Investigators felt that Jimmy Hoffa would have felt comfortable enough with O'Brien,
3:30·whom he considered a foster son, to get into the Mercury.
3:33·FBI agents checked on the whereabouts of the two men Hoffa was supposed to be meeting that
3:37·day.
3:38·"Tony Jack" Giacalone swore he was at the gym where he worked out every day, and witnesses
3:43·placed him at the Southfield Athletic Club at the time of Hoffa's disappearance.
3:47·"Tony Pro" Provenzano was in New Jersey playing cards with friends.
3:53·Both Tonys said they knew nothing about a scheduled meeting with Hoffa.
3:56·Chuckie O'Brien claimed that he hadn't seen Hoffa on July 30 and gave a detailed account
4:01·of his whereabouts.
4:02·He told investigators that he had delivered a 40-pound frozen salmon to the home of a
4:07·Teamster International vice president and helped the man's wife cut the fish into steaks.
4:11·During the time that Jimmy Hoffa had been waiting at the restaurant, O'Brien said he
4:15·was at the Southfield Athletic Club with Anthony Giacalone.
4:19·O'Brien claimed he then took the Mercury to a car wash because fish blood had leaked onto
4:23·the backseat.
4:25·No one at the athletic club or the car wash could corroborate his story.
4:29·Specially trained German shepherds were flown in from Philadelphia eight days after Hoffa's
4:33·disappearance.
4:34·The dogs were given a pair of the labor leader's Bermuda shorts and a pair of his moccasins.
4:39·They picked up Hoffa's scent in the backseat and trunk of Joe Giacalone's maroon Mercury.
4:44·Twenty-six years later in March of 2001, a DNA match was made between a hair found in
4:50·the back of the car and a hair taken from Hoffa's hairbrush.
4:54·Many years have passed since the mysterious disappearance of James Riddle Hoffa, and the
4:58·case remains unsolved.
5:00·But this mystery is not a who-done-it.
5:02·The likely suspects are all known, and their motives are well documented.
5:07·The question is: Where?
5:10·What exactly did they do to Jimmy Hoffa, and where did they dispose of his body?
5:15·In 1959 Robert F. Kennedy, the brother of John F. Kennedy who would soon be elected
5:20·president of the United States, appeared on The Jack Paar Show, America's first late-night
5:25·television talk show.
5:27·At the time Bobby Kennedy was chief counsel of the Senate Labor Rackets Committee, better
5:31·known as the McClellan Committee.
5:34·Speaking to a national television audience, Kennedy had plenty to say about Jimmy Hoffa
5:38·and the Teamsters union, and the crusading young attorney was not afraid to name names.
5:44·Sitting across from an attentive Jack Paar, their images broadcast across America in grainy
5:49·black and white, Kennedy said, "All of our lives are too intricately interwoven with
5:53·this union to sit passively by and allow the Teamsters under Mr. Hoffa's leadership to
5:58·create such a superpower in this country—a power greater than the people and greater
6:03·than the Government...
6:05·Unless something is done, this country is not going to be controlled by the people but
6:09·is going to be controlled by Johnny Dio and Jimmy Hoffa and Tony 'Ducks' Corallo."
6:15·Except for Hoffa's, those names were probably unfamiliar to most Americans, but the directness
6:20·of Kennedy's accusation was courageous and remarkable.
6:24·What public official today would go on The Tonight Show with Jay Leno or The Late Show
6:26·with David Letterman and point the finger at gangsters, using their real names?
6:30·In the late 1950s, the McClellan Committee—named after its chairman, Senator John L. McClellan—was
6:37·set up to investigate the influence of organized crime in labor unions.
6:41·Though Robert Kennedy knew relatively little about organized labor when the committee began
6:45·its work, the young attorney from Massachusetts was a quick study and a tenacious public servant.
6:51·He made no bones about his desire to "get Hoffa."
6:55·Kennedy could not abide corruption on any level, and by all indications, the leadership
7:00·of the Teamsters union was rotten to the core.
7:03·Hoffa had always been a brawler and a bully who would use any means necessary to achieve
7:08·his goals for the Teamsters.
7:10·When he and Kennedy locked horns in the public arena, Hoffa, as was his way, insisted on
7:15·making it personal, ridiculing Kennedy and calling him a "boy."
7:19·When the two men first met at a Washington dinner party, Hoffa had actually challenged
7:23·Kennedy to an arm-wrestling contest and the next day publicly proclaimed victory.
7:29·On another occasion at a restaurant, Hoffa initiated a shoving match with Kennedy because
7:33·he felt that the young attorney had snubbed him.
7:36·Kennedy was everything Hoffa loathed—born into money, Ivy League-educated, refined and
7:42·good-looking—but in Hoffa's estimation Kennedy fell short because he didn't live up to Hoffa's
7:47·standards for manhood.
7:49·Hoffa believed that a real man should be able to handle himself with his fists, intimidating
7:54·his adversaries physically when words weren't enough.
7:57·He also believed in any means to an end.
8:00·According to Hoffa, the only thing that mattered was success, no matter how it was achieved,
8:06·and to Hoffa's way of thinking, dealing with gangsters was necessary for the success of
8:10·the Teamsters.
8:12·But in fact, dealing with Hoffa was more necessary for the success of the mob.
8:16·While the mob provided Hoffa with the kind of muscle he valued, Hoffa provided the mob
8:21·with money, lots of it.
8:23·The jackpot in question was the Central States Pension Fund.
8:27·The hardworking rank and file of the Teamsters entrusted the union with their retirement
8:31·savings with the promise that it would be invested soundly and yield the highest dividends
8:35·possible.
8:36·But under Hoffa, loans were made to such dubious individuals as Jewish gangster Morris "Moe"
8:42·Dalitz, one of the underworld's architects of Las Vegas.
8:46·Dalitz, who started as a member of the notorious Purple Gang in Detroit before moving his base
8:51·of operations to Cleveland, used money loaned from the Teamsters' pension fund to build
8:56·the grand Desert Inn and the Stardust Hotel in Vegas.
9:00·According to Ralph and Estelle James in their book, Hoffa and the Teamsters, Dalitz was
9:04·a member of Hoffa's inner circle.
9:06·In 1949 when the Teamsters threatened to strike against the Detroit Laundry Institute, Dalitz,
9:12·who was a part-owner in a laundry, got Hoffa to intervene behind the scenes and managed
9:17·to avert the strike.
9:18·The McClellan Committee uncovered evidence that the grateful laundry owners of Detroit
9:23·kicked back a substantial sum of money to Hoffa disguised as a loan.
9:27·Mobster Johnny Dio, who was cited by Robert Kennedy on television, was considered the
9:32·master of labor racketeering.
9:34·Born John Dioguardi, he wrote the book on how to profit from labor unions and was welcomed
9:40·by mob families across the country eager to learn from him.
9:43·Dio, who belonged to New York's Lucchese family, would open garment factories, then negotiate
9:46·"sweetheart deals" with the unions that granted him waivers from every major contractual obligation
9:52·contained in their labor agreements.
9:54·In this way Dio was able to use underpaid, nonunion immigrant labor in his factories,
10:00·allowing him to undercut his competitors.
10:03·In exchange for their cooperation, union officials were given generous kickbacks.
10:07·"It cannot be said," the McClellan Committee concluded, "using the widest possible latitude,
10:13·that John Dioguardi was ever interested in the lot of the working man."
10:17·One of Johnny Dio's partners in labor crime was Anthony "Tony Ducks" Corallo, who earned
10:22·his nickname not because he loved waterfowl but because he had an uncanny ability to duck
10:27·convictions in court.
10:28·Dio and Corallo, who would one day become boss of the Lucchese family, set up six "paper
10:32·locals" in New York with Jimmy Hoffa's blessing.
10:35·These locals had no members, only officials who were either made-members or associates
10:40·of the Mafia, and eventually, these men were able to take control of all airport trucking
10:45·in New York City.
10:46·According to the McClellan Committee, these mobsters used "their positions for purposes
10:50·of extortion, bribery, and shakedowns."
10:54·In exchange for this extraordinary license to steal, Hoffa expected the paper locals
10:58·to support him when it came time to vote in Teamster elections.
11:02·According to Stephen Fox in Blood and Power, the McClellan Committee uncovered "a pattern
11:07·of squandered and stolen union funds, sweetheart contracts, conflicts of interest among employers
11:12·and labor leaders, phony 'paper locals' and denial of democratic process to members, collusions
11:18·and coercion and violence always about to break out" in cities across the country, including
11:23·New York, Chicago, Detroit, Cleveland, St. Louis, Pittsburgh, and Minneapolis.
11:30·Hoffa's associates in organized crime included "Angelo Meli, William Bufalino, and Pete Licavoli
11:35·of Detroit; Babe Triscaro of Cleveland; Paul Ricca and Joey Glimco of Chicago; and Johnny
11:41·Dio, Tony Ducks Corallo, and Vincent Squillante of New York.
11:46·" But as Fox points out, "Hoffa took cues—not orders—from gangsters."
11:51·And that's where his troubles began.
11:54·On Valentine's Day 1970, a small airplane towing a long banner flew low over Lewisburg
11:59·Federal Prison in central Pennsylvania.
12:02·The banner proclaimed, "Happy Birthday, Jimmy!"
12:05·It was Jimmy Hoffa's fifty-seventh birthday.
12:08·He had been incarcerated for almost five years.
12:11·Hoffa received lots of birthday cards from loyal rank and file members and Teamster officials
12:16·in addition to the usual stream of encouraging letters.
12:19·But the support that Hoffa was getting through the mail was deceptive.
12:23·Though he was still a hero to the workers he had represented, the corrupt Teamster leadership
12:27·was just as happy to have him on ice.
12:30·Hoffa's handpicked successor for the presidency of the union, Frank Fitzsimmons, was much
12:34·more to their liking.
12:37·Fitzsimmons didn't merely take cues from the gangsters; he practically gave them carte
12:40·blanche to do whatever they wanted with their union positions.
12:44·The even-tempered Fitzsimmons was also much easier to get along with than the pugnacious
12:48·Hoffa.
12:49·In addition, he was a friend of President Nixon and a frequent guest at the White House.
12:55·Fitzsimmons's air of respectability was the perfect cover for the corruption lurking beneath
12:58·the Teamsters.
13:00·Hoffa, on the other hand, was now a con, not the most desirable image for a frontman.
13:06·But Hoffa was undaunted.
13:08·He was determined to regain his seat of power even though the Landrum-Griffin Act stipulated
13:13·that a convicted felon could not hold office in a union until five years after his release.
13:19·Hoffa knew he would have to bide his time.
13:22·His plan was to finish his sentence and wait out the mandatory exclusionary period, then
13:26·mount his campaign against the lackluster Fitzsimmons who consistently disregarded Hoffa's
13:31·suggestions for the Teamsters in favor of the mob's wishes.
13:35·Hoffa was confident that he had the support of the rank and file, and he believed they
13:39·would sweep him back into the office, but while in prison he also tried to shore up
13:44·his mob alliances.
13:46·A high-ranking mobster with close ties to the Teamsters happened to be serving time
13:50·at Lewisburg on an extortion conviction, Hoffa's old friend Anthony "Tony Pro" Provenzano.
13:57·Provenzano was a capo in the Genovese crime family as well as an International Brotherhood
14:02·of Teamsters vice president, controlling the most corrupt local in the country, Local 560
14:07·in Union City, New Jersey.
14:10·Provenzano's position with the union was a longstanding quid pro quo devised by Hoffa
14:15·himself who had been seeking to solidify his mob support.
14:19·Local 560 eventually became Tony Pro's personal piggy bank, allowing him easy access to union
14:25·funds for his own illegitimate purposes.
14:28·In prison, Hoffa and Provenzano were initially close allies.
14:33·Provenzano was a de facto power within Lewisburg, carrying his mob rank with him, and he provided
14:38·Hoffa with protection.
14:40·At one point, Provenzano was paralyzed with a painful stomach ailment, and it was Hoffa
14:45·who raised hell on his behalf, convincing prison officials to get Provenzano the medical
14:49·attention he required.
14:51·But over time their relationship deteriorated.
14:55·Provenzano wanted Hoffa's help in securing a loan from the Teamsters for a restaurant
14:59·he wanted to open, but Hoffa couldn't deliver for him.
15:03·Provenzano was upset over this, and later Hoffa was overheard telling Provenzano, "It's
15:08·because of people like you that I got into trouble in the first place."
15:11·(After they were both released from Lewisburg, a federal informant claimed to have witnessed
15:16·a violent confrontation between Provenzano and Hoffa at a chance meeting at an airport.
15:21·According to Lester Velie in Desperate Bargain: Why Jimmy Hoffa Had to Die, "Hoffa and Provenzano
15:27·went at it with their fists, and Hoffa broke a bottle over Provenzano's head."
15:32·Provenzano angrily threatened Hoffa's grandchildren, swearing "I'll tear your heart out!")
15:37·Hoffa opposed Provenzano's intention to return to his old position with Local 560 after his
15:42·five-year exclusionary period, and likewise, Provenzano opposed Hoffa's desire to recapture
15:48·the presidency of the Teamsters.
15:50·They became each other's problem, but Provenzano had a reputation for making his problems disappear.
15:57·In 1963 a prosecution witness in Provenzano's extortion trial was gunned down shortly before
16:03·he was scheduled to give testimony.
16:06·In 1972 a man involved in a counterfeiting operation with Provenzano simply disappeared.
16:12·In a case uncannily similar to the Hoffa disappearance, Anthony Castellito, the secretary-treasurer
16:18·of Provenzano's Local 560, was lured to a location in upstate New York where he was
16:23·met by a short, slight, and bespectacled loanshark named Salvatore "Sally Bugs" Briguglio who
16:30·allegedly murdered Castellito and transported the body back to New Jersey.
16:35·Castellito's remains were never found.
16:37·Conveniently Provenzano was in Florida at the time of Castellito's disappearance.
16:42·The setup was nearly identical to Hoffa's disappearance.
16:46·When Provenzano returned to the Garden State, he appointed Briguglio, who previously had
16:50·no official connection to the Teamsters, to the victim's former position as secretary-treasurer
16:55·of Local 560.
16:57·In 1985 the FBI released a memo summarizing the Hoffa case and cited Salvatore Briguglio
17:04·as a prime suspect along with Briguglio's brother Gabriel, the brothers Stephen and
17:09·Thomas Andretta, Chuckie O'Brien, "Tony Pro" Provenzano, "Tony Jack" Giacalone, and the
17:15·mob boss of western Pennsylvania, Russell Bufalino.
17:19·In January 1976 and February 1977 the government issued internal reports based on interviews
17:25·with an informer who claimed to know the whole story of what happened to Jimmy Hoffa.
17:30·The informer, Ralph Picardo, was serving a murder sentence at the time in Trenton State
17:35·Prison in New Jersey's capital.
17:37·Picardo had been a business agent for Local 84 in New Jersey and a driver for "Tony Pro"
17:43·Provenzano.
17:44·As reported in The Hoffa Wars by Dan E. Moldea, Picardo claimed that Hoffa had been invited
17:50·to the Machus Red Fox restaurant by Detroit mobster Anthony Giacalone for a "sit-down"
17:55·with Provenzano, so that the two men could iron out their differences.
17:59·Chuckie O'Brien, whose alibi included spending time carving a large fish that day, picked
18:04·up Hoffa at the restaurant and took him to a nearby house where O'Brien had been staying
18:08·with friends.
18:10·Teamster business agent Thomas Andretta, Salvatore Briguglio and his brother Gabriel were in
18:15·the house, waiting to ambush Hoffa.
18:17·A man named Frank Sheeran, who had been president of Local 326 in Delaware, was also in the
18:23·house.
18:24·Sheeran was a close associate of Pennsylvania mob boss Russell Bufalino and had driven Bufalino
18:29·to Detroit that day.
18:31·According to Picardo, the hit on Hoffa was ordered by Bufalino who gave the contract
18:36·to Provenzano.
18:37·Bufalino's cousin William, president of the Teamsters' jukebox local in Detroit, had had
18:42·a serious falling out with Hoffa in 1967.
18:46·Picardo did not say whether Russell Bufalino was actually present for Hoffa's execution,
18:51·but it is curious that on a day when others involved in the conspiracy made sure that
18:55·they were nowhere in the vicinity, Bufalino traveled from his base in Pittston, Pennsylvania,
19:00·to be in the same city.
19:02·Perhaps Bufalino wanted to make sure that the pesky Hoffa was taken care of once and
19:06·for all.
19:08·Or perhaps it was personal, and he wanted to witness the event himself.
19:13·Bufalino's exact whereabouts on July 30, 1975, are unknown, but there is little doubt that
19:19·Hoffa was murdered that day in that house.
19:22·Without a body or circumstantial evidence that will hold up in court, there will probably
19:26·never be a conviction in the slaying of Jimmy Hoffa.
19:29·But the conspirators did not get off scot-free.
19:32·Over the years the government made sure these men were prosecuted to the full extent of
19:36·the law on other charges.
19:39·Anthony "Tony Pro" Provenzano's pocket local, Local 560, eventually came under government
19:44·oversight, putting a major crimp in Provenzano's illegal operations.
19:49·In 1978 he was prosecuted and found guilty of the 1961 murder of Anthony Castellito.
19:56·Seventeen years after Castellito's body was allegedly put through a tree shredder, Tony
20:00·Pro was sent to prison where he died 10 years later at the age of 81.
20:05·Anthony "Tony Jack" Giacalone, who allegedly set up Hoffa, was tried and convicted on tax
20:10·evasion charges and spent 10 years in prison.
20:13·He was charged with racketeering violations in 1996 but died before the case could be
20:19·tried.
20:20·Despite numerous holes in Chuckie O'Brien's alibi, the man who allegedly drove Hoffa to
20:24·his execution was never charged with anything relating to Hoffa's disappearance.
20:29·He moved to Florida where he was given a job by Teamster President Frank Fitzsimmons, but
20:34·in 1990 O'Brien was banished from the union for his mob connections.
20:38·He served a short time in prison in the late '70s for accepting a free car from an auto
20:43·dealership and for lying on a loan application.
20:46·Plagued with ill-health, O'Brien has survived cancer and four heart bypass operations spent
20:52·most of his remaining days in Boca Raton, Florida.
20:55·He kept his version of the events, saying that the government, not the mob, killed Jimmy
21:00·Hoffa.
21:01·Chuckie O'Brien's died of a heart attack in February 2020, at the age of 86.
21:06·Tony Pro associate Salvatore Briguglio was murdered gangland-style on Mulberry Street
21:12·in New York's Little Italy.
21:14·Two gunmen pumped several shots into his chest and head.
21:17·At the time he had been talking with prosecutors and was about to make a deal in exchange for
21:22·his testimony against Provenzano in the Castellito murder case.
21:26·Authorities know who killed Jimmy Hoffa and they know why, but the question that remains
21:31·is where?
21:33·What did Hoffa's killers do with his body?
21:35·Theories—both credible and ridiculous—abound, and some incarcerated felons seem to amuse
21:41·themselves by cooking up scenarios for eager journalists salivating for the scoop of the
21:46·century.
21:47·Tons of earth have been moved in the search for Jimmy Hoffa's remains.
21:51·The following are just a few of the lads that didn't pan out:
21:55·According to Ralph Picardo, the convict who fingered the conspirators, Hoffa's body was
21:59·put in a 55-gallon steel drum and carted away in a Gateway Transportation truck.
22:05·Picardo said he didn't know where it was taken.
22:08·According to another jailbird, Hoffa's body was taken to New Jersey where it was mixed
22:12·into the concrete that was used to construct the New York Giant's football stadium in East
22:16·Rutherford, New Jersey.
22:18·Hoffa was said to have been buried in a 100-acre gravel pit in Highland, Michigan, which was
22:23·owned by his brother William.
22:25·Hoffa's body was encased in the foundation of a public works garage in Cadillac, Michigan.
22:30·His remains were buried at the bottom of a swimming pool behind a mansion in Bloomfield
22:34·Hills, Michigan.
22:35·The corpse was ground up and dumped in a Florida swamp.
22:39·Hoffa was crushed in an automobile compactor at Central Sanitation Services in Hamtramck,
22:44·Michigan.
22:45·His body was buried in a field in Waterford Township, Michigan.
22:49·It was weighted down and dumped in Michigan's Au Sable River.
22:53·Hoffa's remains were disintegrated at a fat-rendering plant.
22:56·He was buried under the helipad at the Sheraton Savannah Resort Hotel, which at the time of
23:01·his disappearance was owned by the Teamsters.
23:04·His body was put in a steel drum and buried on the grounds of Brother Moscato's garbage
23:09·dump, a toxic waste site in Jersey City, New Jersey.
23:13·Jimmy Hoffa was declared legally dead in 1982, but his case remains open.
23:18·Like a perpetual flame, a special agent at the FBI's Detroit field office is constantly
23:23·assigned to it.
23:24·The investigation has generated over 16,000 pages of documents gathered from interviews,
23:30·wiretaps, and surveillance, but despite
23:45·the government's best efforts to get to the bottom of Jimmy Hoffa's disappearance, what
24:23·the mob did with the body remains a question mark.

3 posted on 04/10/2023 7:37:41 PM PDT by SunkenCiv (NeverTrumpin' -- it's not just for DNC shills anymore -- oh, wait, yeah it is.)
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To: SunkenCiv

COME ON MAN!!

IT HAS ALREADY BEEN SOLVED!! WHERE HAVE YOU BEEN!

They found Jimmy Hoffa under all that Make-Up Tammy FAYE Baker was wearing!!


7 posted on 04/10/2023 7:39:59 PM PDT by COSIllinois
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To: SunkenCiv

I believe they cremated him once they killed him. That seems the most effective way to eliminate a body to dispose of it. Turn it to ash and feed a tree.

I would be very surprised if they ever turned up his body.


8 posted on 04/10/2023 7:40:32 PM PDT by Jonty30 (How is grinning and bearing something a bad thing? They are grinning.)
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To: SunkenCiv

My dad always said that it was the car crusher and then a trip to the scrap metal furnace.


17 posted on 04/10/2023 8:25:17 PM PDT by dynachrome (“We cannot save Ukraine by dooming the US economy.” Rand Paul)
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