All Photos
Members of the FBI evidence response team look over an area being cleared in Oakland Township, Mich., Tuesday, June 18, 2013 where officials continue the search for the remains of Teamsters union president Jimmy Hoffa, who disappeared from a Detroit-area restaurant in 1975. (AP Photo/Carlos Osorio)
Members of the FBI evidence response team look over an area being cleared in Oakland Township, Mich., Tuesday, June 18, 2013 where officials continue the search for the remains of Teamsters union president Jimmy Hoffa, who disappeared from a Detroit-area restaurant in 1975. (AP Photo/Carlos Osorio)
slideshow
FBI hunt for ex-Teamster boss Hoffa's remains ends
by COREY WILLIAMS,Associated Press
Jun 19, 2013 | 30 views | 0 0 comments | 6 6 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Members of the FBI evidence response team look over an area being cleared in Oakland Township, Mich., Tuesday, June 18, 2013 where officials continue the search for the remains of Teamsters union president Jimmy Hoffa, who disappeared from a Detroit-area restaurant in 1975. (AP Photo/Carlos Osorio)
Members of the FBI evidence response team look over an area being cleared in Oakland Township, Mich., Tuesday, June 18, 2013 where officials continue the search for the remains of Teamsters union president Jimmy Hoffa, who disappeared from a Detroit-area restaurant in 1975. (AP Photo/Carlos Osorio)
slideshow
OAKLAND TOWNSHIP, Mich. (AP) — A search of a rural field in suburban Detroit has failed to turn up the remains of former Teamsters union leader Jimmy Hoffa, an FBI agent announced Wednesday as authorities ended the dig. "We did not uncover any evidence relevant to the investigation on James Hoffa," said Robert Foley, head of the FBI in Detroit. "I am very confident of our result here after two-days-plus of diligent effort," he said. "As of this point, we'll be closing down the excavation operation." Authorities have pursued multiple leads as to Hoffa's whereabouts since his disappearance in 1975. He was last seen outside an Oakland County restaurant where he was to meet with a New Jersey Teamsters boss and a Detroit Mafia captain. The latest tip about Hoffa's remains came from reputed Mafia captain Tony Zerilli, who, through his lawyer, said Hoffa was buried beneath a concrete slab in a barn in Oakland Township, north of Detroit. The barn is gone, but FBI agents on Monday starting poring over the field where it used to stand. On Tuesday, authorities used a backhoe to dig and move dirt around in the section of land. Authorities also called in forensic anthropologists from Michigan State University and cadaver dogs from the Michigan State Police. Hoffa's rise in the Teamsters, his 1964 conviction for jury tampering and his presumed murder are Detroit's link to a time when organized crime, public corruption and mob hits held the nation's attention. Over the years, authorities have received various tips, leading the FBI to possible burial sites near and far. In 2003, a backyard swimming pool was dug up 90 miles northwest of Detroit. Seven years ago, a tip from an ailing federal inmate led to a two-week search and excavation at a horse farm in the same region. Last year, soil samples were taken from under the concrete floor of a backyard shed north of the city. And detectives even pulled up floorboards at a Detroit house in 2004. No evidence of Hoffa was found. Other theories have suggested he was entombed in concrete at Giants Stadium in New Jersey, ground up and thrown in a Florida swamp or obliterated in a mob-owned fat-rendering plant. Zerilli, now 85, was in prison for organized crime when Hoffa disappeared. But he told New York TV station WNBC in January that he was informed about Hoffa's whereabouts after his release. His attorney, David Chasnick, said Zerilli is "intimately involved" with people who know where the body is buried. Details are in a manuscript Zerilli is selling online.
Comments
(0)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
No Comments Yet
BlueScreenOD
|
June 19, 2013
Ahh, more comments from the lazy and ignorant crowd who are jealous because they aren't coordinated enough to hold a bike upright, and Spandex makes them look like a bad rendition of the Michelin Man. The majority of cyclists are already licensed and paying taxes for roads because they also own cars. As a matter of fact, I carry TWO licenses when I ride. As far as "impeding traffic", the polite thing for a cyclist to do would be to move as far to the right as is safely possible. But if they decide to "take the lane", state law says that bikes are treated the same as cars. So, if you don't enjoy looking at the tightly lycra-clad rear end in front of you, you can either pass where permitted, or you can just get over it. Funny thing that you don't see many basement dwellers who ride bikes sitting behind a keyboard and sniping about those filthy-fast food eating-CO2 emitting-fossil fuel burning-wildlife killing-lazy car and motorcycle drivers. I guess the cyclists have other more interesting things to do.
Peacemakers begin pilgrimage at New Echota
by Abbey Lennon
Jun 19, 2013 | 167 views | 0 0 comments | 13 13 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Pastor Samuel Mosteller (left) and Tom Bluewolf (wearing the black hat), both of Native American ancestry, sign a declaration of peace symbolizing reconciliation between both victims and perpetrators of the Trail of Tears, inside the council house at New Echota, Saturday, June 8, 2013.
Pastor Samuel Mosteller (left) and Tom Bluewolf (wearing the black hat), both of Native American ancestry, sign a declaration of peace symbolizing reconciliation between both victims and perpetrators of the Trail of Tears, inside the council house at New Echota, Saturday, June 8, 2013.
slideshow
A small band of seven people are on one big mission; “to help bring about national reconciliation with America’s First People.” Traveling from places as far away as Virginia and Albany, N.Y., this small group came together Saturday, May 8 at New Echota, the first capital of the Cherokee people, along with other participants representing many cultures and ethnicities, with a plan to end their pilgrimage of peace in Tahlequah, Okla., the new capitol of the Cherokee Nation, Saturday, June 15. Known as the Peacemakers for Sacred Healing the group began the more than 1,000 mile journey, along one of the infamous Trail of Tears routes, with a ceremony in the council house at the historical site. The group listened to speakers such as Pastor Samuel Mosteller, President of the Georgia Southern Christian Leadership Conference and descendant of both Creek and Cherokee Native Americans; and Tom Bluewolf of the Poarch Band of Creek Indians. The group delivered the message that in order to keep the atrocities of the past from occurring again, listening to the stories of the Native American’s journey of suffering, passed down from generation to generation, must be retold, and listened to. “This is really about coming together as a family,” said the groups spokesperson Rev. Claire Daugherty. “A big part of healing is listening to someone’s story. Anyone who has suffered trauma needs to talk about it. On this journey we are listening; listening and saying we are so sorry. We want to hear those stories and we want to repent and work together for a brighter future, we cannot undo the past, but the future is a blank slate. We can learn from the past.” Tom Bluewolf performed a “song of honor through the mouth of the Sassafrass Tree,” a flute created by a fellow Native American, from the bark of the Sassafrass Tree, inscribed with ancient Creek symbols of the wind and star clans. The group performed a symbolic “cleansing” ceremony by writing past transgressions on flash paper to be burned, leaving behind no ash, to the quiet notes of Bluewolf’s flute and the soft beat of the drum. The group then collectively signed a declaration of peace which reads: Peacemakers for Sacred Healing Trail of Tears Journey June 7 – 15, 2013: Georgia, Tennesee, Arkansas, Oklahoma We, the undersigned, are the Peacemakers for Sacred Healing between Native Americans and non-Native Americans. We free ourselves from the pain and anguish of our past. Our committed friendship is bound on earth and in heaven in the spirit of our ancestors. We continue to respect our sacred earth, especially our love for America and will together serve the world as one family under God, Great Spirit, Yahweh, Allah, Jehovah, Heavenly Parent, Creator, True Parents. Amen, Aho, Aju! After the ceremony, the group convened for a picnic of a diverse spread of food and toured the rest of the grounds at New Echota before departing to their next location. According to Daugherty many different Native American descendants and tribes along their journey hosted the group allowing them to hear the stories of generations past. Many groups co-sponsored the pilgrimage including the United Native American Council; The American Clergy Leadership Conference; Family Federation for World Peace; Kingmaker Magazine; Women’s Federation for World Peace; and the Sufi Order of Villa Rica. Along their journey, the group prayed and asked for forgiveness for the wrong done to the Cherokee along the trail of tears, however this was not their first journey for peace. Though plans for the pilgrimage along the infamous Trail of Tears route began approximately six years go, according to Daugherty, since 2007, the group has been to Jamestown, Plymouth and others have also traveled overseas to the Middle East on missions of peace. “We are seed droppers and hopefully you will continue this type of reconciliation work. I hope that in your communities you will continue, and that as you are inspired you will do more and that the pains of this nation can be bound up and we really can live in peace,” said Daugherty. “The bible says the sins of the father are vested on the seventh generation. If you think of a generation as 25 years those seven generations have passed. 175 years, seven times 25. To me that is great news, that means now we can be freed from this painful burden. It’s not just the victim, but the perpetrator, the trauma comes back to them as well, so we must heal together.” The group’s journey ended Saturday in Tahlequah with a sacred “Wiping of the Tears” ceremony at the new Cherokee Capital. Daugherty says she hopes this will be an annual event to help continue to tell the story of what happened to the Nation’s First People, so that it will never happen again. Rev. Tom Cutts, National Executive Director American Clergy Leadership Conference, helped bring the group to Gordon County and New Echota to begin their pilgrimage.
Comments
(0)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
No Comments Yet
Minor League Baseball: Poole, McAdams earn promotion up ladder
by staff reports
Jun 19, 2013 | 237 views | 0 0 comments | 13 13 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Jordan Poole will return to Auburn, N.Y. to play for the Class-A short-season Auburn Doubledays where he played last season after being drafted. (Michelle Bixby, Contributed Photo)
Jordan Poole will return to Auburn, N.Y. to play for the Class-A short-season Auburn Doubledays where he played last season after being drafted. (Michelle Bixby, Contributed Photo)
slideshow
Former Calhoun standouts Jordan Poole and Josh McAdams (known by Schubert during his time at Calhoun) have taken another step along the long road known as Minor League Baseball. Both Poole and McAdams have been assigned to the Class-A Short-Season affiliate for their respective organizations. McAdams, who was drafted in the seventh round of the MLB Draft last June by the Cleveland Indians will play for the Mahoning Valley Scrappers for the remainder of the season barring injury or demotion. Poole, who went in the 14th round to the Washington Nationals, will play for the Auburn Doubledays. After signing last year, he spent 31 games with the Doubledays, hitting .196 with 11 RBIs. Before learnig their assignment to the Class-A Short-Season rosters, Poole and McAdams have both been playing at extended spring training for their organizations. Each team played their opening game on Monday night. McAdams had a hit in a Mahoning Valley loss, while Poole had an RBI in an Auburn 7-3 win. Both teams play in the New York-Penn League and will match up for the first time this Sunday.
Comments
(0)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
No Comments Yet
Latest Galleries
Members of the FBI evidence response team look over an area being cleared in Oakland Township, Mich., Tuesday, June 18, 2013 where officials continue the search for the remains of Teamsters union president Jimmy Hoffa, who disappeared from a Detroit-area restaurant in 1975. (AP Photo/Carlos Osorio)
Members of the FBI evidence response team look over an area being cleared in Oakland Township, Mich., Tuesday, June 18, 2013 where officials continue the search for the remains of Teamsters union president Jimmy Hoffa, who disappeared from a Detroit-area restaurant in 1975. (AP Photo/Carlos Osorio)
slideshow
FBI hunt for ex-Teamster boss Hoffa's remains ends
by COREY WILLIAMS,Associated Press
Jun 19, 2013 | 30 views | 0 0 comments | 6 6 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Members of the FBI evidence response team look over an area being cleared in Oakland Township, Mich., Tuesday, June 18, 2013 where officials continue the search for the remains of Teamsters union president Jimmy Hoffa, who disappeared from a Detroit-area restaurant in 1975. (AP Photo/Carlos Osorio)
Members of the FBI evidence response team look over an area being cleared in Oakland Township, Mich., Tuesday, June 18, 2013 where officials continue the search for the remains of Teamsters union president Jimmy Hoffa, who disappeared from a Detroit-area restaurant in 1975. (AP Photo/Carlos Osorio)
slideshow
OAKLAND TOWNSHIP, Mich. (AP) — A search of a rural field in suburban Detroit has failed to turn up the remains of former Teamsters union leader Jimmy Hoffa, an FBI agent announced Wednesday as authorities ended the dig. "We did not uncover any evidence relevant to the investigation on James Hoffa," said Robert Foley, head of the FBI in Detroit. "I am very confident of our result here after two-days-plus of diligent effort," he said. "As of this point, we'll be closing down the excavation operation." Authorities have pursued multiple leads as to Hoffa's whereabouts since his disappearance in 1975. He was last seen outside an Oakland County restaurant where he was to meet with a New Jersey Teamsters boss and a Detroit Mafia captain. The latest tip about Hoffa's remains came from reputed Mafia captain Tony Zerilli, who, through his lawyer, said Hoffa was buried beneath a concrete slab in a barn in Oakland Township, north of Detroit. The barn is gone, but FBI agents on Monday starting poring over the field where it used to stand. On Tuesday, authorities used a backhoe to dig and move dirt around in the section of land. Authorities also called in forensic anthropologists from Michigan State University and cadaver dogs from the Michigan State Police. Hoffa's rise in the Teamsters, his 1964 conviction for jury tampering and his presumed murder are Detroit's link to a time when organized crime, public corruption and mob hits held the nation's attention. Over the years, authorities have received various tips, leading the FBI to possible burial sites near and far. In 2003, a backyard swimming pool was dug up 90 miles northwest of Detroit. Seven years ago, a tip from an ailing federal inmate led to a two-week search and excavation at a horse farm in the same region. Last year, soil samples were taken from under the concrete floor of a backyard shed north of the city. And detectives even pulled up floorboards at a Detroit house in 2004. No evidence of Hoffa was found. Other theories have suggested he was entombed in concrete at Giants Stadium in New Jersey, ground up and thrown in a Florida swamp or obliterated in a mob-owned fat-rendering plant. Zerilli, now 85, was in prison for organized crime when Hoffa disappeared. But he told New York TV station WNBC in January that he was informed about Hoffa's whereabouts after his release. His attorney, David Chasnick, said Zerilli is "intimately involved" with people who know where the body is buried. Details are in a manuscript Zerilli is selling online.
Comments
(0)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
No Comments Yet
BlueScreenOD
|
June 19, 2013
Ahh, more comments from the lazy and ignorant crowd who are jealous because they aren't coordinated enough to hold a bike upright, and Spandex makes them look like a bad rendition of the Michelin Man. The majority of cyclists are already licensed and paying taxes for roads because they also own cars. As a matter of fact, I carry TWO licenses when I ride. As far as "impeding traffic", the polite thing for a cyclist to do would be to move as far to the right as is safely possible. But if they decide to "take the lane", state law says that bikes are treated the same as cars. So, if you don't enjoy looking at the tightly lycra-clad rear end in front of you, you can either pass where permitted, or you can just get over it. Funny thing that you don't see many basement dwellers who ride bikes sitting behind a keyboard and sniping about those filthy-fast food eating-CO2 emitting-fossil fuel burning-wildlife killing-lazy car and motorcycle drivers. I guess the cyclists have other more interesting things to do.
Peacemakers begin pilgrimage at New Echota
by Abbey Lennon
Jun 19, 2013 | 167 views | 0 0 comments | 13 13 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Pastor Samuel Mosteller (left) and Tom Bluewolf (wearing the black hat), both of Native American ancestry, sign a declaration of peace symbolizing reconciliation between both victims and perpetrators of the Trail of Tears, inside the council house at New Echota, Saturday, June 8, 2013.
Pastor Samuel Mosteller (left) and Tom Bluewolf (wearing the black hat), both of Native American ancestry, sign a declaration of peace symbolizing reconciliation between both victims and perpetrators of the Trail of Tears, inside the council house at New Echota, Saturday, June 8, 2013.
slideshow
A small band of seven people are on one big mission; “to help bring about national reconciliation with America’s First People.” Traveling from places as far away as Virginia and Albany, N.Y., this small group came together Saturday, May 8 at New Echota, the first capital of the Cherokee people, along with other participants representing many cultures and ethnicities, with a plan to end their pilgrimage of peace in Tahlequah, Okla., the new capitol of the Cherokee Nation, Saturday, June 15. Known as the Peacemakers for Sacred Healing the group began the more than 1,000 mile journey, along one of the infamous Trail of Tears routes, with a ceremony in the council house at the historical site. The group listened to speakers such as Pastor Samuel Mosteller, President of the Georgia Southern Christian Leadership Conference and descendant of both Creek and Cherokee Native Americans; and Tom Bluewolf of the Poarch Band of Creek Indians. The group delivered the message that in order to keep the atrocities of the past from occurring again, listening to the stories of the Native American’s journey of suffering, passed down from generation to generation, must be retold, and listened to. “This is really about coming together as a family,” said the groups spokesperson Rev. Claire Daugherty. “A big part of healing is listening to someone’s story. Anyone who has suffered trauma needs to talk about it. On this journey we are listening; listening and saying we are so sorry. We want to hear those stories and we want to repent and work together for a brighter future, we cannot undo the past, but the future is a blank slate. We can learn from the past.” Tom Bluewolf performed a “song of honor through the mouth of the Sassafrass Tree,” a flute created by a fellow Native American, from the bark of the Sassafrass Tree, inscribed with ancient Creek symbols of the wind and star clans. The group performed a symbolic “cleansing” ceremony by writing past transgressions on flash paper to be burned, leaving behind no ash, to the quiet notes of Bluewolf’s flute and the soft beat of the drum. The group then collectively signed a declaration of peace which reads: Peacemakers for Sacred Healing Trail of Tears Journey June 7 – 15, 2013: Georgia, Tennesee, Arkansas, Oklahoma We, the undersigned, are the Peacemakers for Sacred Healing between Native Americans and non-Native Americans. We free ourselves from the pain and anguish of our past. Our committed friendship is bound on earth and in heaven in the spirit of our ancestors. We continue to respect our sacred earth, especially our love for America and will together serve the world as one family under God, Great Spirit, Yahweh, Allah, Jehovah, Heavenly Parent, Creator, True Parents. Amen, Aho, Aju! After the ceremony, the group convened for a picnic of a diverse spread of food and toured the rest of the grounds at New Echota before departing to their next location. According to Daugherty many different Native American descendants and tribes along their journey hosted the group allowing them to hear the stories of generations past. Many groups co-sponsored the pilgrimage including the United Native American Council; The American Clergy Leadership Conference; Family Federation for World Peace; Kingmaker Magazine; Women’s Federation for World Peace; and the Sufi Order of Villa Rica. Along their journey, the group prayed and asked for forgiveness for the wrong done to the Cherokee along the trail of tears, however this was not their first journey for peace. Though plans for the pilgrimage along the infamous Trail of Tears route began approximately six years go, according to Daugherty, since 2007, the group has been to Jamestown, Plymouth and others have also traveled overseas to the Middle East on missions of peace. “We are seed droppers and hopefully you will continue this type of reconciliation work. I hope that in your communities you will continue, and that as you are inspired you will do more and that the pains of this nation can be bound up and we really can live in peace,” said Daugherty. “The bible says the sins of the father are vested on the seventh generation. If you think of a generation as 25 years those seven generations have passed. 175 years, seven times 25. To me that is great news, that means now we can be freed from this painful burden. It’s not just the victim, but the perpetrator, the trauma comes back to them as well, so we must heal together.” The group’s journey ended Saturday in Tahlequah with a sacred “Wiping of the Tears” ceremony at the new Cherokee Capital. Daugherty says she hopes this will be an annual event to help continue to tell the story of what happened to the Nation’s First People, so that it will never happen again. Rev. Tom Cutts, National Executive Director American Clergy Leadership Conference, helped bring the group to Gordon County and New Echota to begin their pilgrimage.
Comments
(0)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
No Comments Yet
Minor League Baseball: Poole, McAdams earn promotion up ladder
by staff reports
Jun 19, 2013 | 237 views | 0 0 comments | 13 13 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Jordan Poole will return to Auburn, N.Y. to play for the Class-A short-season Auburn Doubledays where he played last season after being drafted. (Michelle Bixby, Contributed Photo)
Jordan Poole will return to Auburn, N.Y. to play for the Class-A short-season Auburn Doubledays where he played last season after being drafted. (Michelle Bixby, Contributed Photo)
slideshow
Former Calhoun standouts Jordan Poole and Josh McAdams (known by Schubert during his time at Calhoun) have taken another step along the long road known as Minor League Baseball. Both Poole and McAdams have been assigned to the Class-A Short-Season affiliate for their respective organizations. McAdams, who was drafted in the seventh round of the MLB Draft last June by the Cleveland Indians will play for the Mahoning Valley Scrappers for the remainder of the season barring injury or demotion. Poole, who went in the 14th round to the Washington Nationals, will play for the Auburn Doubledays. After signing last year, he spent 31 games with the Doubledays, hitting .196 with 11 RBIs. Before learnig their assignment to the Class-A Short-Season rosters, Poole and McAdams have both been playing at extended spring training for their organizations. Each team played their opening game on Monday night. McAdams had a hit in a Mahoning Valley loss, while Poole had an RBI in an Auburn 7-3 win. Both teams play in the New York-Penn League and will match up for the first time this Sunday.
Comments
(0)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
No Comments Yet