FBI searched New Jersey former landfill for body of Jimmy Hoffa, long-missing Teamsters union chief
The new search for Teamsters boss Jimmy Hoffa in Jersey City underneath a bridge is just the latest in one of law enforcement's wildest goose chases.
Views of the future Skyway Park, a former illegal dumping ground for toxic waste that city officials plan on transforming into a memorial park for the hundreds of thousands of Americans who have died from the COVID-19 pandemic, as seen on February 25, 2021 in Jersey City, New Jersey.
Andrew Lichtenstein | Corbis News | Getty Images
Is the body of long-missing Teamsters union boss Jimmy Hoffa really to be found stuck in the dirt somewhere near the swamps of Jersey?
The FBI confirmed to NBC News that in October it searched a site of a former landfill in northern New Jersey for Hoffa's body, apparently based on a tip from the son of the landfill business partner who claimed to have buried him.
That search for Hoffa in Jersey City underneath a heavily-traveled bridge is just the latest over decades in what has been one of law enforcement's wildest goose chases, with multiple location searches over the years.
Most of those searches occurred in Michigan, where Hoffa last was seen in 1975, years after he had lost control of what had been the largest union in the United States, and served a prison stint for jury tampering, mail and wire fraud, and conspiracy.
One notorious tip, which did not lead to a search, was that Hoffa was buried in the concrete foundation of the old Giants Stadium in New Jersey's Meadowlands.
The 2019 Martin Scorsese film "The Irishman," itself based on the non-fiction book "I Heard You Paint Houses," details the disputed claim by purported Mafia hitman and Teamsters official Frank Sheeran that he killed Hoffa, who was later cremated.
Teamsters Union president Jimmy Hoffa in Washington on July 26, 1959.
AP Photo
The latest search was first reported Thursday by The New York Times. The investigative reporter Dan Moldea originally wrote about the tip that led to the search.
"Last month, the FBI obtained a search warrant to conduct a site survey underneath the Pulaski Skyway, FBI spokesperson Mara Schneider from the Detroit field office told NBC News.
"On October 25th & 26th, FBI personnel from the Newark and Detroit field offices completed the survey and that data is currently being analyzed," Schneider said.
"Because the affidavit in support of the search warrant was sealed by the court, we are unable to provide any additional information."
News of the search came the same week as the International Brotherhood of Teamsters elected Sean O'Brien as its general president, replacing Hoffa's son, James Hoffa, who had served in that role for 22 years. The younger Hoffa did not seek re-election.
The tip about his father's body's purported whereabouts came from Frank Cappola, the son of former landfill business partner Paul Cappola.
Paul Cappola, according to Moldea's account, as he approached death in 2008 told Frank that he buried Hoffa's body in a 55-gallon steel drum after the labor leader vanished in 1975, amid a fallout with the New Jersey Mafia chieftain Anthony "Tony Pro" Provenzano.
"Unidentified people brought Hoffa's dead body to" the site, Frank later wrote in a summary of what his father told him.
Frank Cappola died in 2020.
Moldea told The Times that the FBI contacted him about Frank's claims later that year, after he wrote about them.
The Times report noted that records show that the FBI received tips over the years, including in 1975, that Hoffa was buried in a Jersey City landfill. An earlier search based on those tips uncovered nothing.