In Hoffa’s Shadow https://inhoffasshadow.com/ By Jack Goldsmith Mon, 07 Oct 2019 12:49:26 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.4.3 “In Hoffa’s Shadow,” Week 2 https://inhoffasshadow.com/in-hoffas-shadow-week-2/ Mon, 07 Oct 2019 12:49:26 +0000 https://inhoffasshadow.com/?p=7064 Here are my interviews, plus an essay by me, from the last week.  Very grateful for the interest. Jimmy Hoffa, My Stepfather, and Me, The Atlantic (10-7-19) Interview with Ben Wittes, The Lawfare Podcast (10-5-19) Interview With Brian Ross, Brian Ross Investigates (10-3-19) Interview with Hugh Hewitt, The Hugh Hewitt Show (10-3-19) Interview with Christina Pazzanese, Harvard Gazette (10-2-19) Interview with Dave Davies, Fresh Air (NPR) (10-1-19)

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Here are my interviews, plus an essay by me, from the last week.  Very grateful for the interest.

Jimmy Hoffa, My Stepfather, and Me, The Atlantic (10-7-19)

Interview with Ben Wittes, The Lawfare Podcast (10-5-19)

Interview With Brian Ross, Brian Ross Investigates (10-3-19)

Interview with Hugh Hewitt, The Hugh Hewitt Show (10-3-19)

Interview with Christina Pazzanese, Harvard Gazette (10-2-19)

Interview with Dave Davies, Fresh Air (NPR) (10-1-19)

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First Week of Reviews of “In Hoffa’s Shadow” https://inhoffasshadow.com/first-week-of-reviews-of-in-hoffas-shadow/ Mon, 30 Sep 2019 12:21:36 +0000 https://inhoffasshadow.com/?p=7050 I could not have asked for a better set of reviews for In Hoffa’s Shadow in the first week. Chris Nashawaty, New York Times (9-27-19): “Jack Goldsmith’s gripping hybrid of personal memoir and forensic procedural lands with the force of a sucker punch. …  [O]ver the course of ‘In Hoffa’s Shadow,’ Goldsmith’s quest becomes less...

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I could not have asked for a better set of reviews for In Hoffa’s Shadow in the first week.

Chris Nashawaty, New York Times (9-27-19): “Jack Goldsmith’s gripping hybrid of personal memoir and forensic procedural lands with the force of a sucker punch. …  [O]ver the course of ‘In Hoffa’s Shadow,’ Goldsmith’s quest becomes less about solving a mystery than a meditation on the complicated and occasionally bittersweet love between fathers and sons. It turns out that sometimes the search for truth can be its own reward.”

Seth Stern, Christian Science Monitor (9-24-19): “Goldsmith has produced a wonderful book about the complicated relationship between a deeply flawed stepfather and the adopted son he loved deeply and forgave unconditionally for casting him aside.”

Jennifer Szalai, New York Times (9-24-19)― “The book’s pacing is steady and unrelenting, as Goldsmith toggles between his own careful narrative voice and Chuckie’s off-the-cuff wiseguy vernacular.  … “In Hoffa’s Shadow” covers a lot of ground, but I was most struck by the frankness with which a buttoned-up Goldsmith writes about his stepfather.”

Heather Catillo, WXYZ Detroit (9-23-19)―“Seven years of research, looking at grand jury information, interview with original case agents, interview with the case agents who worked it through the nineties, … it’s a really fascinating read.”

Hugh Hewitt, Washington Post (9-23-19)―”[T]he unlikeliest riveting read of the year … [R]eaders from all backgrounds and across entire political and economic spectra won’t be able to put it down.”

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Hugh Hewitt Review https://inhoffasshadow.com/hugh-hewitt-review/ Mon, 23 Sep 2019 12:29:10 +0000 https://inhoffasshadow.com/?p=7042 Hugh Hewitt generously reviews In Hoffa’s Shadow in his Washington Post column.  A long excerpt: There’s a new book out this week about [Chuckie O’Brien], and it is the unlikeliest riveting read of the year: “In Hoffa’s Shadow” by Jack Goldsmith. … Chuckie O’Brien was a surrogate son to Hoffa for decades. Until he wasn’t. Then...

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Hugh Hewitt generously reviews In Hoffa’s Shadow in his Washington Post column.  A long excerpt:

There’s a new book out this week about [Chuckie O’Brien], and it is the unlikeliest riveting read of the year: “In Hoffa’s Shadow” by Jack Goldsmith. …

Chuckie O’Brien was a surrogate son to Hoffa for decades. Until he wasn’t. Then he became a prime suspect in the disappearance of the square-jawed, always combative but in the year of his disappearance dethroned union leader. That path, from penniless street kid to the pinnacle of American labor then to prison and a never-written ending, became a subject of Goldsmith’s book.

Why is this large figure in American labor history of such interest to the Harvard don? Did the professor’s studies of criminal procedure as it relates to his national security state specialty take him down an interesting and, these days, abandoned road?

Turns out Chuckie O’Brien is Goldsmith’s stepfather. Turns out that Jack Goldsmith was once Jack O’Brien until, as an adult, Goldsmith shed the name of his stepfather. …

I was prepared to be informed by Goldsmith. He’s always worth reading on any topic on which he opines. But I wasn’t prepared to be transfixed by a D.C. “backstory” unlike any out there. Goldsmith’s journey from adoring stepson to embarrassed college and law student to striving young lawyer to mature adult aware of Chuckie’s very good and very compromised parts is part of this tale, and Goldsmith candidly tells it without overweighting its importance to the larger narrative about Hoffa. …

Though Hoffa was undeniably and thoroughly corrupt, in varied, deep and powerful ways, he was also very much a tribune of organized labor. Still, he was comfortable dealing with organized crime when it helped his union, and his side deals — Goldsmith recounts Hoffa’s pivotal role in financing early Las Vegas — enriched him in ways that remain shocking.

But his ruthlessness was matched by Kennedy’s, and once in prison and out of power, Hoffa grew bitter. Through Chuckie O’Brien’s and Goldsmith’s eyes, there’s an opportunity for some empathy and a lot of astonishment. … And though Hoffa did not go gently into the night, his abrupt and final exit is as dark as any tragedy.

And then Goldsmith’s personal history came to be intertwined with the United States’ history post-9/11. It’s hard to overstate how unlikely this story is, and similarly difficult to overestimate my certainty that readers from all backgrounds and across entire political and economic spectra won’t be able to put it down.

 

 

 

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Jimmy Hoffa Was Not in This Car on July 30, 1975 https://inhoffasshadow.com/jimmy-hoffa-was-not-in-this-car-on-july-30-1975/ Thu, 19 Sep 2019 03:28:01 +0000 https://inhoffasshadow.com/?p=7015 “I feel that probable cause exists to believe that CHARLES O’BRIEN has used JOSEPH GIACALONE’s automobile to facilitate an abduction of HOFFA,” an FBI Agent proclaimed in an affidavit on August 8, 1975, nine days after Jimmy Hoffa disappeared from a parking lot near a popular restaurant in Bloomfield Hills,. Michigan. Charles O’Brien is also...

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“I feel that probable cause exists to believe that CHARLES O’BRIEN has used JOSEPH GIACALONE’s automobile to facilitate an abduction of HOFFA,” an FBI Agent proclaimed in an affidavit on August 8, 1975, nine days after Jimmy Hoffa disappeared from a parking lot near a popular restaurant in Bloomfield Hills,. Michigan.

Charles O’Brien is also known as Chuckie O’Brien, Jimmy Hoffa’s long-time right-hand man, and my stepfather since I was 12 years old.  Joseph Giacalone is the son of Anthony Giacalone, a deceased Detroit organized crime figure and someone that Chuckie, and I (when I was a boy), called “Uncle Tony.”  Joey’s car was a 1975 maroon Mercury Marquis. Chuckie borrowed Joey’s Mercury on July 30, 1975, and drove to the Detroit suburbs to deliver a frozen salmon to a friend.  The FBI in 1975 believed that after Chuckie delivered the salmon, he picked up Hoffa in the Mercury and delivered him nearby to his killers. The probable cause affidavit was used as a basis to seize the Mercury.

The Hoffa case is still open, the FBI still possesses the car, and, in the public mind, Chuckie is still the leading suspect.  Here is a recent picture of the 1975 Mercury in a FBI warehouse in Detroit.

And here is a picture of the car’s backseat, more than four decades after the FBI tore it up looking for evidence.

The FBI in 1975 found a hair in the backseat that was later determined to be a DNA match to Hoffa.  Scent dogs also detected Hoffa’s scent in the car.  (Under threat of judicial order, the Bureau purchased the car from Joey Giacalone for $6,000 in 1977, and they used it for a long time as an FBI mail and package delivery vehicle.)

These are but some of the reasons why the FBI originally believed that Chuckie O’Brien was involved in the crime. And ever since, the public has believed it too.  A dozen books and thousands of news stories have repeated the original FBI theory that Chuckie picked up and delivered Hoffa.  Google it, and you’ll see.

But as I show in my new book, In Hoffa’s Shadow, out next week (Tuesday, September 24), Chuckie did not pick up Hoffa that day and Hoffa was never in that Mercury.  The 1970s FBI theory is wrong, and the lead FBI investigators on the case, and other government officials, have not believed the theory for decades.

It took me seven years of hard work to figure this out, and to figure out a lot more about the disappearance and its run-up.  I believe that, despite my acknowledged interest in the case, my book presents the most objective, fair-minded, and revealing assessment of Hoffa’s disappearance to date—one that sheds authentic new light on the case and the era in which it happened.  While I believe the book exonerates my stepfather, I did not figure out who actually did the deed.  But I do report in the book who the FBI today thinks did it; it is an account far different from the ones floated publicly for 44 years.

In Hoffa’s Shadow is about much, much more than Hoffa’s disappearance.  My work on the book started with that focus, but the project over time grew much bigger and more ambitious.  It became a larger story about Chuckie’s extraordinary relationships to Hoffa and Anthony Giacalone, set against the backdrop of the rise of labor and organized crime in the 20th century, and government efforts to squelch both.  And it also became a story about my relationship to Chuckie.  When I was in my twenties, I renounced him and caused him enormous pain.  Decades later I sought his forgiveness, which he gave, completely and instantly.  Chuckie taught me a lot in and after our reconciliation: about love, loyalty, and forgiveness; and about government overreaching, injustice, Hoffa’s true relationship with organized crime, and Omerta.  I explain all this in the book.  I also explain why Mario Puzo modeled Tom Hagan on Chuckie; why Bobby Kennedy’s vendetta against Hoffa ironically weakened labor unions and empowered the mob; how Hoffa’s efforts to regain control of the Teamsters union in the 1970s intersected with the Watergate scandal; and much more.   

Below are some of the blurbs for the book and a few early reactions, for all of which I am grateful. The book is out next Tuesday, September 24.  I hope you will pre-order it: AmazonBarnes and NoblePowell’sIndieBound, and Books-A-Million.

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In Hoffa’s Shadow is a masterpiece and a page-turner―I couldn’t put it down. Brilliant, suspenseful, and deeply moving, it offers a personal view of one of the greatest unsolved crimes in American history. At the same time, it offers startling insights into organized crime, the labor movement, and the surprising origins of today’s surveillance state. Beautifully written and full of unexpected turns, this book is gripping and revelatory from start to finish.” ―Amy Chua, professor at Yale Law School and author of Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother and Political Tribes: Group Instinct and the Fate of Nations

“A thrilling, unputdownable story that takes on big subjects―injustice, love, loss, truth, power, murder―and addresses them in sentences of beauty and clarity informed by deep thought and feeling. Goldsmith, one of the finest minds of his generation, has told an insane tale with a storyteller’s flair. This is one of the best works of autobiography that I’ve read in a very, very long time.” ―Bill Buford, former fiction editor of The New Yorker and author of Heat and Among the Thugs

In Hoffa’s Shadow by #HLS Professor @jacklgoldsmith is one of the most remarkable American memoirs and ‘back-stories’ I have ever read. An unlikely riveting read.” Hugh Hewitt, Contributing Columnist to The Washington Post, host of the Hugh Hewitt Show

“I am one of the world’s experts on the July 30, 1975, murder of Jimmy Hoffa. And, now, Jack Goldsmith―with his brilliant research and beautiful writing style―comes along and tells me a whole bunch of things I never knew about that day. Satisfying his curiosity about his stepfather’s alleged role in the crime and through his own personal integrity, Goldsmith has advanced the state of evidence of this unsolved mystery, bringing us closer to a final resolution.” ―Dan E. Moldea, author of The Hoffa Wars

“Some people are born into stories and then live them out beyond anyone’s wildest
imagination. That’s what happened to Jack Goldsmith, one of the era’s heroic jurists. His shadow life across fifty years with a mob-connected stepfather tells a larger and essential story about America.

The century-long sweep of Goldsmith’s narrative brilliantly wraps Jimmy Hoffa, Bobby Kennedy, and Bush and Cheney―as well as long-awaited revelations about what happened to the Teamster King, and themes of class, corruption, meritocratic mendacity, workin’ man’s blues, prosecutorial perfidy, and the Mob―around a heart-song saga of Chuckie and Jack, a dad and son who search for love across the divides that have riven American.

This is an extraordinary, muscular adventure story about what’s happened to our nation and what’s possible for its future. A must-read.” ―Ron Suskind, author of Life, Animated and The One Percent Doctrine

“This is an incredible story, plainly rebutting the clear understanding of many that Charles O’Brien drove Jimmy Hoffa to his death, and offering a profoundly beautiful recognition of the nature of paternal love. This book will make you weep, repeatedly, for the injustice, and for the love.” ―Lawrence Lessig, professor at Harvard Law School and author of They Don’t Represent Us and Republic, Lost

“A dramatic reexamination of Jimmy Hoffa’s life and disappearance, presented by a legal scholar with a beguiling personal connection.  … Beyond Chuckie’s mysterious revelations, the author constructs a sprawling narrative, capturing how Hoffa—and an impressively rendered cast of gangsters and political figures—unwittingly oversaw labor’s decline. … A darkly engaging account of an important, misunderstood epoch.” Kirkus Reviews

 

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First Review https://inhoffasshadow.com/first-review/ Thu, 29 Aug 2019 12:59:49 +0000 https://inhoffasshadow.com/?p=6978 Kirkus has the first review of In Hoffa’s Shadow. A dramatic reexamination of Jimmy Hoffa’s life and disappearance, presented by a legal scholar with a beguiling personal connection. Goldsmith … delivers a complex narrative focusing on his stepfather, Chuckie O’Brien, Hoffa’s right-hand man and eventual suspect in the gangster’s 1975 disappearance. … The author adeptly synthesizes...

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Kirkus has the first review of In Hoffa’s Shadow.

A dramatic reexamination of Jimmy Hoffa’s life and disappearance, presented by a legal scholar with a beguiling personal connection.

Goldsmith … delivers a complex narrative focusing on his stepfather, Chuckie O’Brien, Hoffa’s right-hand man and eventual suspect in the gangster’s 1975 disappearance. … The author adeptly synthesizes his personal involvement with the tale of politics, mobsters, and working-class decline that Hoffa represents, though he, too, finds the mystery unsolvable.

A darkly engaging account of an important, misunderstood epoch.

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