A sign outside a Milford Township, Mich., food establishment is seen Monday, May 29, 2006. Sunday marked the 12th consecutive day of the search for Hoffa's body at Hidden Dreams Farm in Milford Township. On Monday, a local prosecutor said the FBI was wrapping up its two-week search of the suburban Detroit horse farm after finding no trace of Hoffa's remains.
Normal chores are taken care of at Hidden Dreams Farm in Milford, Mich., Monday, May 29, 2006, a day before the FBI called off the search for the remains of former labor leader Jimmy Hoffa. Hoffa was last seen in July 1975 when he was scheduled to have dinner at a Bloomfield Township restaurant, about 20 miles from the farm.
An FBI official erects a temporary fence surrounding the area where a horse barn once stood during an ongoing search for the remains of Jimmy Hoffa Sunday, May 28, 2006, at a farm in Milford, Mich. Digging at the 89-acre search site continueed through the holiday weekend, said FBI spokeswoman Dawn Clenney. Sunday marked the 12th day of the search of the site about 30 miles northwest of Detroit.
FBI evidence recovery team members and Michigan State University anthropologists and archaeologists search outside a horse farm in Milford Township, Mich., where federal agents are digging in search of the body of former Teamsters leader Jimmy Hoffa May 18, 2006, in one of the most intensive searches for Hoffa in decades.
Federal agents dig up part of a horse farm where organized crime figures used to meet in the latest search for "the human remains of James Riddle Hoffa," a search warrant obtained Thursday says. Officials confirmed that the target of their two-day search at Hidden Dreams Farm outside Detroit was the remains of the former Teamsters leader, who disappeared in 1975.
Unidentified workers dig near a barn at a horse farm in Milford Township, Mich., where FBI agents looking into Jimmy Hoffa's 1975 disappearance were investigating for a second day Thursday, May 18, 2006. The FBI said Thursday that a search is expected to take at least a couple weeks and likely would involve the removal of a barn.
FBI agents talk at a site in Milford Township, Mich., on May 17, 2006. They were searching for clues to the disppearance of former Teamsters leader Jimmy Hoffa. A law enforcement official in Washington said the search was based on information developed several years ago and verified more recently.
FBI agents talk on May 17, 2006, at a farm in Milford Township, Mich., where they are looking for clues to the disppearance of Jimmy Hoffa. On May 18, agents spent a second day at the farm, about 20 miles from the Oakland County restaurant where the Teamsters leader was last seen alive.
The entrance to the horse ranch in Milford Township, Mich., where the FBI is searching for clues to the disappearance of former Teamsters leader Jimmy Hoffa is seen on May 17, 2006.
John and Deb Koskovich talk outside their home in Milford Township, Mich., on May 17, 2006, about the FBI search at a neighbor's property for clues in the disappearance of Jimmy Hoffa. The Teamsters leader was last seen in July 1975 at a restaurant in Bloomfield Township, Mich. For years, it has been rumored that Hoffa is buried in the neighborhood surrounding a horse farm where organized crime figures used to meet.
A house in northwest Detroit that was being investigated in the case of Teamsters president Jimmy Hoffa's July 30, 1975, disappearance is shown on May 29, 2004. A book written by Charles Brandt stated that a now-deceased local Teamsters president from Delaware, Frank "The Irishman" Sheeran, pulled the trigger and killed Hoffa in the foyer just inside the front doorway.
Officials oversee the excavation of a swimming pool in search for evidence in the disappearance of Jimmy Hoffa in Hampton Township, Mich., July, 16, 2003.
Among the many rumors regarding Jimmy Hoffa's whereabouts is that his body is entombed in concrete near section 107 of Giants Stadium in East Rutherford, N.J., shown here on Jan. 8, 2006. Others theorize he was ground up and thrown to the fishes in a Florida swamp or obliterated in a mob-owned fat-rendering plant that has since burned down.
Teamsters president Jimmy Hoffa is shown on June 3, 1974, in Washington. On May 17, 2006, FBI agents searched property northwest of Detroit for clues to the disappearance of Hoffa, officials said. The Teamsters leader was last seen in July 1975 at a restaurant in Oakland County's Bloomfield Township.
James R. Hoffa, former Teamsters Union President, leaves the penitentiary in Lewisberg, Pa., after serving his sentence, Dec. 23, 1971. Attempted bribery of a grand juror. In 1967, Hoffa was sentenced to 15 years in prison for attempted bribery of a grand juror. In 1971, President Richard M. Nixon commuted his sentence to time served on the condition he not participate in union activities for 10 years.
Jimmy Hoffa, left, former president of the Teamsters union, and his son, James P. Hoffa, wait at the Greater Pittsburgh Airport April 12m 1971, where they were changing planes enroute to the federal prison in Lewisburg, Pa., after visiting Jimmy Hoffa's wife at a hospital in San Francisco. He was returning to prison under the custody of his son.
Jimmy Hoffa, then vice president of the Teamsters Union, testifies on Aug. 20, 1957, before the Senate Rackets Committee. Hoffa led the union from 1957 to 1967. He was sent to prison for jury tampering and fraud in the late 1960s and disappeared without a trace in 1975. His body has never been found.
Wearing matching smiles and appearing singularly unworried, Dave Beck, right, President of the Brotherhood of Teamsters, and James R. Hoffa, then vice president of the same union, pose for photographers at AFL-CIO headquarters June 5, 1957 in Washington, D.C., for a hearing before the AFL-CIO ethical practices committee on charges that the Teamsters union was dominated by corrupt influences.
Robert F. Kennedy, left, talks with Teamsters Union president James R. Hoffa on Aug. 21, 1957. As attorney general, Kennedy went after Hoffa.