A Fox Nation investigation into the claim about where Jimmy Hoffa is buried is being actively pursued by law enforcement authorities to determine if the legendary labor leader, or another missing mob victim, is buried under a plot of land in New Jersey.
The development comes after Fox Nation s investigative series Riddle: The Search for James R. Hoffa used ground-penetrating radar to detect multiple large pieces of curved buried metal, similar to buried drums, where Hoffa s remains were said to be buried in a 55-gallon metal drum shortly after he disappeared in Detroit in 1975. This is going to lead up to finding him, Frank Cappola told Fox Nation.
Teamsters union boss James R. Hoffa vanished in 1975 and his death has never been solved
He disappeared after arranging a meeting with the mafia in Detroit
Now, Fox Nation says it may have found where he was secretly buried
It is a landfill site in New Jersey that was formerly owned by mobsters
The son of one of those mobsters claims Hoffa was stuffed in a steel barrel and put in the ground, beneath other barrels
Fox Nation brought in radar excavation teams to survey the site
They detected curved metal shapes beneath the ground that could be the barrels
James Hoffa, right, talks with Robert Kennedy, counsel for the Senate Rackets Investigating Committee, in Washington, D.C. on Aug. 21, 1957. Two reporters recently located a potential Hoffa burial site. (Image:
Associated Press)
Fox News anchor and reporter Eric Shawn wrote on the network’s website Friday that radar identified “large buried pieces of curved metal” where Hoffa might have been buried in a 55-gallon steel drum. The dump site is in Jersey City beneath the Pulaski Skyway. The skyway, opened in 1932, connects Jersey City and Newark.
Shawn and investigative reporter Dan E. Moldea appear together at the parcel in the fourth episode of
Nomination materials due by Jan. 18, 2021
Nominations sought for 2021-22 Penn State Laureate
October 15, 2020
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. – The University is seeking nominees for the role of 2021-22 Penn State Laureate, with nomination materials due by Monday, Jan. 18, 2021.
The endowed annual position of Penn State Laureate was established in 2008 to bring greater visibility to the arts and humanities (a thematic priority in Penn State’s strategic plan) and the honoree’s work, and to enrich the University.
The Penn State Laureate is a full-time faculty member who is assigned half-time to this role for one academic year. The laureate has opportunities throughout the year to bring their artistic perspectives to a variety of audiences, including visits to Commonwealth Campuses and communities statewide.