Nope, Jimmy Hoffa Wasn't Buried Underneath That Michigan Driveway

Still Missing: Jimmy Hoffa on July 24, 1975. He disappeared six days later.
Tony Spina

The 37-year-old search for Teamsters boss Jimmy Hoffa will continue.

As Mark reported last week, the search for Hoffa turned to a driveway in Roseville, Mich. Police took "soil core" samples after they received a "credible" tip that someone was buried there right around the time Hoffa went missing.

The Detroit News reports police announced the results of their tests. As you may have guessed it: They came up empty.

The Detroit News adds:

"Roseville Police Chief James Berlin said the results showed no signs of human decomposition.

"Berlin said in light of the findings, the department is concluding its investigation into the possible interment of a body on the property near Gratiot and Common Road.

"Soil samples were removed from the site Friday and were then tested by the forensic and anthropology department at Michigan State University."

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn
  • Email
Eyder Peralta is NPR's East Africa correspondent based in Nairobi, Kenya.
More Stories
  1. A member of Israel's war cabinet says he'll quit if there is no plan to replace Hamas
  2. Pete McCloskey's life reminds us how politics long in the past live on in the present
  3. Ohio reviewing race-based scholarships after Supreme Court affirmative action ruling
  4. Opinion: A tale of two cities' 'Portal' pandemonium
  5. In a debate over a school name, it's not just parents who are attached to the past