St. Clair Inn played a role in the mystery of Jimmy Hoffa's disappearance - New Baltimore Voice Newspapers

A quarter-century ago, when most of the baker's dozen of suspects in the murder of Hoffa were still alive, rumors occasionally wafted over cocktail tables and across bar tops in St. Clair that Hoffa's body was buried under the north wing of the... Today, 60 miles northeast of where Hoffa vanished, orange plastic fencing encloses a portion of the St. Clair Inn, shuttered now for more than a year and a half, as if it might be the site of some kind of crime. Chucky O'Brien, whom Hoffa treated like a foster son, told the FBI that he and mob lieutenant Anthony Giacalone, also known as Tony Jack, had dinner at the St. Clair Inn on Aug. O'Brien has long been suspected to be the driver of the 1975 Mercury Marquis Brougham that ferried Hoffa to his ultimate fate. Tony Jack was one of the two men Hoffa was supposed to meet at the restaurant Machus Red Fox, now an Andiamo restaurant, but who never showed. "O'Brien indicated that he had dinner with Anthony Giacalone after driving in Anthony Giacalone's 1975 Cadillac to the St. Clair Inn on August 1, 1975," according to a 1991 decision by Independent Administrator Frederich B. Lacey, adjudicating an... Source: www.voicenews.com