Think they're done looking for Hoffa?

RoryN

You're screwed.
Joined
Apr 8, 2003
Posts
57,871
Think again. Here comes the next chapter...

Alleged Detroit gangster says he knows where Jimmy Hoffa is buried

By Marc Santia, NBC New York

A Detroit man described by federal agents as a formerly high-ranking gangster is breaking his silence about the unsolved mystery in the disappearance of Jimmy Hoffa after decades of refusing to answer questions.

The man -- who federal agents say is a main character in the infamous unsolved mystery -- says the union leader was buried in a field in suburban Detroit -- about 20 miles north of the restaurant where he was last seen.

Eighty-five years old and barely able to walk, Tony Zerilli never thought this day would come.

“I’m dead broke. I got no money,” Zerilli told NBC 4 New York. “My quality of life is zero.”

It’s certainly not what you would expect to hear from a man the feds say was once a high-ranking member of the Detroit La Cosa Nostra family.

“He actually had risen up at one point to the underboss – or second in command,” Andy Arena, former head of the FBI for New York and Detroit, said of Zerilli.

Former U.S. Attorney Keith Corbett, who prosecuted organized crime in Detroit for 20 years, says Detroit's mafia families share blood relations in addition to their sworn bonds, which is one reason why Hoffa’s disappearance has gone unsolved.

In July 1975, Hoffa told people he was going to meet two men at a restaurant in suburban Detroit. One was a suspected member of the Detroit mafia. The other was a Teamster boss from New Jersey. Hoffa, who’d been investigated for dealings with the mafia, was seen at the restaurant -- and then never again.

“Organized crime was involved in the disappearance of Jimmy Hoffa,” Corbett said.

“I think the interesting thing about the Hoffa disappearance was that it was compartmentalized to only a few people," Arena said. "They kept that thing quiet."

Until now. Zerilli says he wants to set the record straight about his life -- and what happened to Hoffa.

Zerilli denies ever being in the mafia or having anything to do with the disappearance of Hoffa.

"What happened to Hoffa had nothing to do with me in any way, shape or form,” Zerilli said.

Zerilli says he was crushed when Hoffa vanished. It was news he received while behind bars after he was convicted for being involved in illegal operations in Las Vegas casinos.

“They accused me while I was away," Zerilli said of his time in prison. "If that’s not an alibi I don’t know what the hell an alibi is."

"If I wasn’t away I don’t think it ever would’ve happened, that’s all I can tell you," said Zerilli. "I would’ve done anything in the world to protect Jim Hoffa.”

Still, when Zerilli was released from prison, the feds were all over him -- they demanded information about Hoffa’s disappearance. That didn’t do much good back then and even today Zerilli says he refuses to name names.

“I’m not a stool pigeon,” he said.

But the feds are convinced that Zerilli knows what happened.

“Clearly when he returned he would’ve been a person, based on his position in the hierarchy, who would have been able to learn the facts and circumstances surrounding the disappearance of James Earl Hoffa,” said Corbett.

Zerilli says he’s been frustrated watching the FBI chase countless tips from publicity hounds seeking attention by saying they know Hoffa’s burial spot – rumors that have included locations around Detroit and the Meadowlands in New Jersey.

“All this speculation about where he is and he’s not," Zerilli said. "They say he was in a meat grinder. It’s all baloney."

The truth, Zerilli says, is that Hoffa never got very far from where he was last seen. He believes the union leader's final resting place is about 20 miles north of the restaurant where he was last scene, in a field in northern Oakland County, Mich.

He was buried in a shallow grave and the plan was to move the body at another time, but Hoffa's remains were never moved from the first spot where they were buried, Zerilli said.

"Once he was buried here, he was buried and they let it go,” Zerilli said.

When told about Zerilli’s revelations, Corbett, a man who’d worked organized crime in Detroit for two decades, was flabbergasted.

“The bureau had a short list of people they wanted to talk to about that and I can’t think of anybody on that list who was more highly placed then Anthony Zerilli,” said Corbett. "This is certainly the most interesting and attractive lead that has come up since I’ve been involved with this -- and I think the bureau would react the same way.”


For his part, Zerilli wants closure for himself and Hoffa’s family.

“I’d like to just prove to everybody that I’m not crazy," Zerilli said. "And it means a lot to me. What happened, happened while I was in jail. And I feel very, very bad about it and it should never have happened to Jim Hoffa. He didn’t deserve what happened to him.

Zerilli also wants a payday. He's working on a book and has a web site, hoffafound.com. He believes that he can make money if -- and when -- Hoffa’s body is found in that field. He’s waiting on the FBI to make the next move.

http://usnews.nbcnews.com/_news/201...ays-he-knows-where-jimmy-hoffa-is-buried?lite
 
Probably not. If they ever found him we probably wouldnt know. We need one good mystery her in Detroit. We dont have a damn thing bettee to do.
 
My guess is he was thrown into some molten steel at one of the mills and became a fender for a mustang or cadallic
 
How many Teamsters does it take to change a light bulb?

Twelve. You got a problem with that?
 
I think there's a good chance there are no remains to be found.


But you didn't hear that from me.
 
HOFFA: Family feud at heart of recent revelations about the missing Teamster

By Scott M. Burnstein
Posted: Wednesday, 01/16/13 10:28 am

An intra-family squabble could be at the heart of the stunning new revelations in the 38 year-long search for the remains of slain labor boss Jimmy Hoffa, arguably one of the nation’s most infamous unsolved crimes.

The piece of property in Oakland Township recently alleged by convicted Detroit mob leader Anthony (Tony Z) Zerilli that Hoffa was buried was owned by his first-cousin and former superior in the mafia, Giacomo (Black Jack) Tocco, at the time of Hoffa’s disappearance on July 30, 1975.

In a two-part television interview this week jointly done between WDIV Channel 4 in Detroit and WNBC out of New York, Zerilli, 85, and a one-time confidant of the fearless Teamsters president, said he was told an open field on Buell Road, near the intersection of Adams and Orion roads, a parcel once owned by Tocco, also 85, is Hoffa’s final resting place.

Sources close to the situation claim it is no secret that Zerilli and Tocco are feuding.

“There is a good deal of acrimony between Tony and his cousin, Jack,” said retired federal prosecutor Keith Corbett of the pair’s relationship. “And the resentment goes both ways.”

Corbett is quite familiar with Tocco and Zerilli. He successfully prosecuted them more than a decade ago (Tocco in 1998, Zerilli in 2002), in what was the biggest organized crime case in the history of the state. Convicted under the RICO Act as being the respective “Boss” and “Underboss,” or second in charge, of the area’s mob family, Tocco and Zerilli, are alleged to have fallen out over the bust and who caused it.

Whoever was at fault, both went to prison for it — Tocco for two years, Zerilli for seven.

Since Zerilli returned home from behind bars in 2009, he’s been shunned by his cousin, a man he grew up with and was business partners with until a series of squabbles began to erode their relationship.

“Jack won’t take his calls, won’t see him,” said one associate of theirs who declined to be named. “Everyone knows Jack blames Tony Z for what happened back in the 90s. There’s no letting bygones be bygones with these kind of people.”

The deterioration in their relationship actually began years earlier — as far back as the early 1970s when Zerilli was demoted in favor of Tocco to take the place of Zerilli’s dad (longtime reputed Detroit Godfather Joe Zerilli) atop the crime family he had allegedly headed for 41 years.

On the afternoon Hoffa was last seen in the parking lot of the Machus Red Fox Restaurant (now Joe Vicari’s Andiamo Tuscan Steakhouse) off Telegraph Road in Bloomfield Township, Zerilli was serving a prison sentence for skimming $6 million from the Frontier Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas.

The arrest and subsequent conviction for his activities in Las Vegas, FBI documents allege, caused the elder Zerilli to tap his nephew, Tocco, instead of his son as his successor.

Despite not having first-hand knowledge of the notorious gangland slaying, his high-profile status within the crime syndicate, both during his incarceration and following his release, would give Zerilli access to such sensitive information.

In his television interview, he claimed he would have tried to prevent Hoffa’s demise had he been a free man at the time.

Zerilli, who experts are calling the most credible source to ever come forward in the investigation, says he is “flat broke” and that a potential payday for a book he is trying to sell, as well as peace of mind for the Hoffa family are his sole motivations for coming forward. He denies any involvement in the planning of the murder and membership in the mob.

Tocco bought the Buell Road property on a land contract in 1972, not officially taking title until 1982 from Bellaire Diversified, Inc. Over the years, Tocco, a very prominent and respected member of Southeastern Michigan’s Italian-American community, has owned a number of properties and businesses in Oakland County, including him and Zerilli co-owning the Hazel Park Race Track together for more than 30 years.

Joe Zerilli and William (Black Bill) Tocco, the pair’s fathers, were first-cousins, best friends and brother-in-laws, who immigrated to Detroit from Sicily at the turn of the twentieth century and are reputed to have founded the modern day mafia in the city, after winning what the local press dubbed, “The Crosstown Mob War” in 1931. The elder Zerilli and Tocco died peacefully as free men in 1977 and 1972, respectively.

Both Joe Zerilli’s and Jack Tocco’s names appear in the noted Hoffex memo (the official FBI report on the incident), tabbed as suspects in the crime.

Hoffa was killed after butting heads with the mob in his attempt to retake the Teamsters presidency following his own release from prison three years prior to his disappearance on bribery and jury-tampering charges.

http://www.macombdaily.com/article/...recent-revelations-about-the-missing-teamster
 
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