New
dig fails to find
body of Jimmy Hoffa
body of Jimmy Hoffa
10:09 AM Wednesday Oct 3, 2012
NZ Herald
Jimmy Hoffa |
Like many others that came before it, the
latest search for former Teamsters boss Jimmy Hoffa has come up empty.
Tests on soil samples gathered last week from
a backyard in suburban Detroit showed no traces that Hoffa or anyone else was
buried there, Roseville police announced.
"Our department just received the soil
sample report from Michigan State University, after a battery of tests; the
samples submitted for examination showed no signs of human decomposition,"
the police statement read. "As a result of these tests the Roseville
Police Department will be concluding their investigation into the possible
interment of a human body upon the property."
Thus ended the latest in a long string of tips
and rumors about one of America's great mysteries.
Over the years, authorities have dug up a
Michigan horse farm, looked under a swimming pool and pulled up floorboards in
their quest for the former union leader. Other theories were that his remains
were ground up and tossed into a Florida swamp, entombed beneath Giants Stadium
in New Jersey or obliterated in a mob-owned fat-rendering plant.
Hoffa last was seen July 30, 1975, outside a
restaurant in Oakland County, more than 50 kilometers to the west.
The day he disappeared, Hoffa was supposed to
meet with a New Jersey Teamsters boss and a Detroit mafia captain.
The latest search led police, reporters and
curious onlookers to Patricia Szpunar's brick ranch-style home in Roseville.
Police in the mostly working- and middle-class community north of Detroit
recently received a tip from a man who claimed he saw someone buried there
about 35 years ago and that the body possibly belonged to Hoffa.
"The police have left and the yellow tape
has come down," Szpunar told The Associated Press on Tuesday afternoon.
"I'm thrilled because it's over with. No more people staring at my house,
driving by, walking by, pausing to stare. I can go on with my life."
The soil samples were removed Friday after officials
drilled through the floor of a shed on Szpunar's property. Roseville police
Chief James Berlin has said the ground would be excavated if decomposition were
found in the samples.
Szpunar said she's happy to have her shed
back.
"My son can put the motorcycle back in
there," she said.
Police had put a new, more secure lock on the shed. They gave
Szpunar the key Tuesday.
Peter’s Piece
James Riddle Hoffa (1913-1975?) led a controversial life right
from his earliest years when he organized a union in a grocery chain that he
worked for. His actions led to his dismissal.
Later he joined the Teamsters in Detroit and started rising
through the ranks and became national president in 1957. By that time the
Teamsters (International Brotherhood of Teamsters) had well over 1 million
members.
His greatest achievement was the establishment of a national master
freight agreement for over-the-road drivers in 1964.
Hoffa spent most of the 1960s in prison having been convicted of
jury tampering, bribery and fraud. He was pardoned by President Nixon in 1971
in return for the Teamsters support for Nixon’s re-election in 1972. But his
release was subject to Hoffa being banned from union activities until 1980. The
Teamsters gave him a one-off retirement payment of $1.7 million.
Jimmy Hoffa was campaigning to re-enter union life when he
disappeared from a Michigan restaurant in 1975.
Riddle was his second name and he left behind a riddle that has
kept police and gossipers busy for 37 years. But one thing must now be almost
certain; Jimmy Hoffa is most unlikely to be still alive. If he was he would now
be aged 99.
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