Jimmy Hoffa may be buried in a steel drum beneath other metal barrels at a New Jersey landfill site where excavators say there is proof a pit was once dug and filled in after the union leader’s 1976 disappearance.
The whereabouts of Hoffa’s remains has always been a mystery but according to Frank Cappola, the son of the late mobster Paul Cappola Sr, he is buried at a landfill site beneath the Pulaski Skyway.
The site used to belong to Cappola’s father but is now owned by the New Jersey Department of Transportation and is used by a local waste management company to store unused dumpsters.
According to Cappola, Hoffa was murdered in Detroit after showing up to a mafia meeting. His body was then taken back to New Jersey, where Cappola told Fox Nation his father put him in a barrel, head first, then buried him.
Fox Nation journalist host Eric Shawn visited the site with a team of excavators who used radar technology to detect curved metal objects in the ground where Cappola claimed Hoffa was buried.
Teamsters boss James R. Hoffa vanished in 1975 after arriving at a meeting with mafia bosses a Detroit restauran
The site where Jimmy Hoffa is said to be buried at a landfill in New Jersey
Fox Nation visited the site with a team of radar excavators who detected metal objects where Hoffa is said to be buried in a metal drum
The radar detector found metal in the ground that they would say be consistent with the drums described
Eric Shawn standing in front of the trailer beneath which Hoffa is said to be buried
Now, the show’s host and producers say they are waiting for law enforcement to intervene and dig up the site.
Cappola does not name Hoffa’s killer but Phillip Moscato Jr, whose father was mobster Phillip ‘Brother’ Moscato Sr, has previously claimed it was hitman Salvatore ‘Sally Bugs’ Briguglio who shot him, and not Frank ‘The Irishman’ Sheeran, who was recently played by Robert De Niro in The Irishman.
Moscato told Fox Nation that Cappola’s claims about where the body is are right.
The show also brought in a radar excavation team to examine the site where the pair say Hoffa’s remains are.
That team did not dig up anything but they said their radar technology proved the ground had been disrupted and was dug up and filled.
The landfill site today where Hoffa is reportedly buried in a steel drum beneath ground
Frank Cappola claimed in November 2019 that Hoffa’s body was buried at the landfill site and that it was his father who put him there. Cappola died in February 2020
Their radars also detected curved metal objects, similar to the barrels Cappola described.
Cappola did not give details of how his father came to be involved, but he told the show how he pushed Hoffa’s body in the steel drum.
‘He couldn’t get the legs to bend right.
‘Don’t take this the wrong way, because he had a lot of respect for Hoffa, but he said “they couldn’t fit the fat little man in a barrel feet first.”
‘So they put him in headfirst and then they pushed the cover on top of him. And then they buried him,’ he said.
His father then buried him in a spot where he thought the ground would not be disturbed.
It was right next to a spot that the government did dig up in the 1980s.
Hoffa was last seen alive on July 30, 1975, eating at a restaurant in suburban Detroit where he’s believed to have met a group of Mafiosos whom he’d known for decades, in an effort to secure their support for his bid to return as the Teamster’s president
Hoffa left his home in his green Pontiac Grand Ville (above) and drove to the Machus Red Fox restaurant in Bloomfield Township. After he left, he disappeared
Martin Scorsese’s Netflix smash-hit, The Irishman, is the latest film to offer a fictionalized version of Hoffa’s story (pictured: Al Pacino playing the role of Hoffa)
Known as a federal Superfund site, it was cleared out in the 1980s by the U.S. Department of Environmental Protection which removed barrels filled with toxic waste.
‘My father decided to change location because he felt he couldn’t, he didn’t know if somebody was watching.
‘The place was always under surveillance. After I came in the next day, the hole was filled,’ Cappola told Fox Nation.
Cappola said he had finally decided to come forward because most of the people involved were dead.
He told Fox Nation that his father, who died in 2008, had always been haunted by his role in the killing.
‘[He] was very upset all his life over it, that he had to get put into that position. But you know, if you don’t do it, then they do it to you.
‘I think I am doing the right thing. My father said “I want this man to go home to his family. He needs to go back home.”
‘He was a great, good man and my father respected him,’ he said.
Hoffa intended to testify before the special U.S. Senate investigative panel, known as the Church Committee, about Mafia involvement in U.S.-backed plots to assassinate Cuban President Fidel Castro before his death.