editors: mary long jo mnarcotty barb cornell Sunday magcizine inside: page four-books page five-profile Number 2 Page Three September2 28, 1975 FEATURES Stakeout at the Hoffa's Anatomy of a media vigil Jimmy Hoffa was missing and scores of reporters swarmed his family's estate to fend off mosquitos and pounce on any tidbit of information that could shed light on his disappear- ance. At first they waited for the big news, but as the days wore on the leads dried up, and the two week vigil ended with every question left unanswered. By SARA RIMER IN THE BEGTNNING there was the van. Shiny white and showy, it stood guard outside the lakefront estate for two weeks It was the networks' $225-per-day baby, and when they wheeled it up to the gate, a two week press stakeout began. ABC told its camera crew: "You're going to be there until the body's found." So they got a van to make the waiting easier. The men filled it with Miquor and food. At night they climbed into the van and barricad- ed themselves against the mosqui- toe3 and downed gin and tonics between rounds of poker. The "body" was and is that of former Teamster union leader James R. Hoffa. On July 30, he went to have lunch with Detroit's Mafia kingpin Anthony (Tony Jack) Giacalone. At 2:30 p.m. Hoffa called his wife Josephine from the Machus Red Fox restaur- ant in Bloomfield Hills and snap- ped, "Where the hell's Giacalone? I'm waiting for him." Ten minutes later he called his old friend limousine proprietor Louis Linteau; and sounded even angrier. "Where the fuck is Gi- acalone? He stood me up!" His family and friends say that was the last time they heard from the stocky, controversial "little guy."' At 9:30 the next morning, Hof- fa's son James P. cut short his va- cation and flew to Pontiac from northern Michigan. At 6 p.m. he signed a missing person report. His father never came back. WROM THE START, Jimmy Hoffa was assumed kidnapped. Reporters and camera crews gathered around Hoffa's Lake Ori- on estate. At first all the big names were there: --,Neal from the N.Y. Daily News, Agis Salnukas from the New York Times, Robert Dob- kin and Brooks Jackson from the Associated press, Ralph Orr from the Detroit Free Press, and Irving Levine from NBC. The Bloomfield Township police handled the case at first and gave daily news briefings. When the FBI took over on Monday and put the lid on the case. By then it was clear the Hoffa house was no place to wait for leads. The big name reporters went back to their office telephones to consult their sources. Covering the Hoffa family's vigil became a daily routine for network sound and camera men and reporters from the Detroit Free Press, AP, and the Detroit News. Whoever engineered Hoffa's ab- duc."on - the reporters had no doubt that it was the mob-did it with expertise and left virtually no clues. So while a FBI platoon stak- ed out the house 24 hours a day and interviewed thousands of per- sons across the nation in search of A lead, there was little to report. The networks wanted pictures; the newspapers wanted quotes. So each night, the cameras followed Hoffa's wife Josephine, 55, as she walked across the three acre estate -always accompanied by a family member. She has a heart condi- tion and the family doctor said he prescribed the daily walks to help strengthen ner frail health. She never spoke to reporters. They wondered aloud on that segond presence. He said they helped to "keep the pressure on," presum- ably meaning the pressure to in- vestigate his father's disappear- ance. One night he presented two giant - size pizzas to the media members. On August 15, the second week of Hoffa's disappearance, Free Press city editor John Oppedahl told rewrite man James C. Dewey, "Send Rimer to the house." Dewey told me to grab a good novel and head a company car down Route I-75 to "mosquito mansion." Dur- ing the stakeout's first week re- porters returned from the 6 p.m. to 11 p.m. shift covered with mos- quito bites; Dewey's nickname stuck. 1-75 TURNS IN Pontiac onto La- peer Rd., a commercial route; then Lapeer turns left onto Clark- ston - a winding tree-lined, coun- try road that had a nice view of Three men pulled up in a car and unloaded a reli- gious statue onto the front lawn. Josephine Hoffa's walk took a different turn, and she knelt in front of the statue instead of continuing across the lawn. While she prayed, the camera crews filmed and said, "That's it, she's giving up." week if she believed her husband was still alive. Cameramen focused on the fam- ily's supper when they dined out- side on the terrace; once a network rented a boat and shot the scene from the lake instead of the pond. But the biggest news came when James P., the son, gave an occa- sional brief press conference out- side the gate. He blinked under the bright lights and usually told re- porters in a weary voice that there was nothing new. The first week reporters asked Hoffa daily whe- ther he believed his father was still alive. He steadfastly answered yes. Hut, when AP reporter Dobkin cornered Hoffa alone in the ga- rage, his composure shattered and he cried. Reporters got their day's lead story. After that Hoffa effectively con- trolled the interview cards. The pack went along with Detroit News reporter Charlie Cain's idea that no one should risk asking any gestion that might send Hoffa running back to the house. But Hoffa told reporters at least once that he was grateful for their the lake where the trees grew less thick. About five miles down Clark- ston I crossed a narrow railroad track, and then made a sharp right turn onto ,Hoffa's road - Allen- dale. The road led a quarter mile to the crew of journalists camped outside the family home. There was barely enough space for even one car; and reporters traveling the road had to dodge each oth- er's cars, the younger Hoffa's Lin- coln Continental, and FBI cars. One day reporters pursued Jo- sephine Hoffa when she unexpect- edly tore down the drive from the house, and the narrow road made the chase especially treacherous. Journalists and their gear were a strange sight. There was the van, of course. About eight cars were usually parked by the four-foot- hinh fence that surrounded Hoffa's lakefront property. In front of each car a telephone was plugged into a common outlet on the fence. Reporters liked to sit atop their cars with the phones beside them when they called into their city Jesks and network offices. Oc- casionally, when reporters thought they had exclusive information, they dragged the cord through an open window, rolled the windows up tight with only a crack on one side for the phone, and then with an excited covert expression, re- layed their information to an edi- tor or rewrite man. Such instances were rare on the Hoffa stakeout. And when they did happen, they were generally false alarms. The n e t w o r k people delighted in spreading untrue rumors that set the city desk rewrite men scramb- linu Tbe van had the only bathroom in 1e vicinity, an extra that gave the networks a slight edge over the newsnaner reporters. After all, if voi wanted to use the facilities, von; had to be nice to your tele- viir~ hosts. Television people supplied the hard liquor throughout the stake- out and were rarely seen without a gOn and tonic or beer in their hands. They returned each night to the Michigan Inn for more for- mal carousing. Occasionally. re- por..s tossed frisbees, and one cva' eramar entertained with folk- sv tines olaved on a recorder.He also did voice imitations of the BiSauare Lake seagulls that flew overhead. But, usually the crews lounged aroind, trading theories on Hoffa's disappearance, making Hoffa jokes ("Did you hear Hoffa's in a Den- ver hosnital suffering from 'labor pains?"'), and recounting the dis- mal statistics of network life (a 75 per cent divorce rate, they claimed). They talked about the more ex- ciring stakeouts they'd seen: the wounded Knee Indian rebellion, the Patty Hearst shootout in Cali- fornia, the Kent State shootings in Ohio. And while they automatic- ally turned their cameras on Mrs. Hoffa's daily walks and awaited the younger Hoffa's infrequent press conferences, they rarely stonped to think about what the family must have said away from their cameras To the people inside the house -- Mrs. Hoffa, Jimmy P. Hoffa, and Hoffa's daughter, Mrs. Barbara Crancer of St. Louis, the waiting must have been agony. To the camera crews it was dull, but thanks to overtime pay, it was also lucrative. N MONDAY, THE first night I was there, the younger Hoffa gave a brief press conference at about 8:30 at the gate. 'Gentlemen," he began, "We have one lead." Reporters wrote rapidly as Hoffa told them he'd spoken to a man who claimed to be an eyewitness to the abduction at the Machus Red Fox restaurant. No one asked a s inle cuestion - by pre-arranged agreement. However, the witness later failed two FBI-administered polygraph tests, and the informa- tion that topped page one on Tues- day morning was soon forgotten. On Tuesday nothing newsworthy hapnened. Hoffa did not speak to reporters. Network people began to complain about the assignment's drudgery. So when Josephine Hof- fa suddenly jumped into her car around noon and drove away, re- por -ers were primed for a chase. Free Press reporters Jane Briggs and News reporter Charlie Cain doubled up in Briggs' car and tore off. CBS producer Rick Kaplan and Channel 7 reporter Vince Wade pursued in separate cars. Cain and Briggs came back about 20 minutes later with lunch from the Hardee's on Lapeer Rd. They had not seen Mrs. Hoffa. I Kaplan returned shortly after- ward, also with lunch from Har- dee's and no sign of Mrs. Hoffa. They all worried that Wade had found their common prey. When Josephine returned and walked up to the house with what looked like a pizza in a large card- board box, they were convinced that Wade had followed her to some pizza joint and was now in- terviewing everyone in the place. They decided that when Wade returned they would tell him that Josephine had spoken to reporters. Wade came back an hour later, and they fed him the rehearsed line. He didn't bite. AT ABOUT 11 p.m. that night I was sitting in the Free Press car, listening to CKLW and fend- ing off mosquitoes, when a man with a shaven head appeared at the window.''Hey, are you a re- porter?" he asked in a low voice. When I nodded, he went on, "Lis- ten, You gotta get me in Hoffa's house. I'm a private investigator; I know where the man is; I've got to talk to his son." I was desperate for something to make the night desk take notice, and so I wanted to believe the man. "If you know where Hoffa is," I urged, "Why don't you tell me first?" Then it was soon apparent from his disjointed talk that the guy was nuts - another of the weirdoes who were sure they had the case cracked. A couple other reporters wandered over to tell the guy to get lost fast. After that I locked my car late at night. There were hundreds of people who called the newspaper daily and claimed they knew where Hoffa was buried - under the Lodge Freeway construction, at executive editor Kurt Luedtke's house, and at the bottom of the Detroit River. Back in the office, the Free Press Hoffa team - Jo Thomas, Ralph Orr, and Fred Girard - followed legitimate - sounding tips and cranked out a story almost daily. Some of the other reporters felt left out and more than a lit- tle jealous. They joked about go- ing off to find Hoffa's body and then dumping it on the city desk. ON WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON Jane Briggs angered the net- work people on the stakeout, and relations between our paper and them became hopelessly strained. After the incident we went down the road to Hardees to use the bathroom. Briggs was probably the best re- porter on the second week of the stakeout. She didn't drink, and read about three books during the ordeal. But when Hoffa or any other family member pulled up, she always hurried over to ask questions. Briggs detested the stakeout's pack journalism and since she re- fused the networks' beer she felt no obligation to share her informa- tion with them. They felt differ- entlv. When Jimmy P. pulled up to the house that afternoon, she cor- nered him for several minutes of nrivate conversation. The network nPeonle were furious that "the blonde girl from the Free Press il% m m