Gabe Briguglio, Last Mafia Suspect in Hoffa Case, Dies at 86

  • Last living New Jersey Hoffa suspect dead at 86
  • Genovese associate long linked to Teamsters boss disappearance
  • Decades-old investigation into Jimmy Hoffa’s fate remains unsolved

Gabriel “Gabe” Briguglio, a long-sidelined Genovese crime family associate who for decades was named by investigators as a suspect in the 1975 disappearance of Teamsters leader Jimmy Hoffa, died last week at age 86.

Jimmy Hoffa, Gabe, Genovese crime family, Teamsters, Tony Provenzano, Sally Bugs
Gabe Briguglio, foreground, participating in an identity line-up in December 1975 as part of the investigation into the disappearance of Jimmy Hoffa earlier that year. Briguglio always denied involvement. (Image: Bettman/Getty)

Journalist Dan E. Moldea, whose Substack has chronicled the case for 50 years, broke the news. He described Briguglio as “the last living named suspect in the New Jersey investigation of the murder of […] Hoffa.”

Briguglio passed away at his home in Toms River, N.J., on November 2, according to an obituary in The Bergen Record, which now appears to have been removed.

The death notice said his hobbies included “crabbing, fishing, cooking for family and friends, going to estate sales, auctions and garage sales looking for ‘the best deal.’”

Murdered by the Mob

Hoffa is widely believed to have been murdered by the Mafia, which by the mid-1970s, had begun to see him as a liability.

Previously, the powerful labor union leader had been an enabler of Mob expansion in Las Vegas by channeling Teamsters pension funds into casino construction.

Briguglio and his older brother, Salvatore “Sally Bugs” Briguglio, belonged to the New Jersey faction of the Genovese family, long overseen by Mafia capo Anthony “Tony Pro” Provenzano, who doubled as Teamsters president for Local 560 in Union City, N.J.

The Provenzano crew’s main rackets involved labor extortion, kickbacks, and control of trucking contracts through the union. Provenzano and Hoffa had once been allies, but the latter’s attempt to regain the union presidency after his 1971 release from prison on corruption charges created tension.

Federal investigators believe Hoffa’s attempted comeback rankled with Provenzano and other mob-linked union bosses who feared exposure or loss of control.

Within months, FBI sources named Salvatore and Gabriel Briguglio and Thomas Andretta – all from Provenzano’s crew – as possible participants in the abduction and murder.

These names appeared in a December 1975 federal court hearing where an investigator under oath said a witness had identified the three New Jersey men as being involved.

Sally Named as Triger Man

Several FBI informants named Sally Bugs as one of the men who picked Hoffa up outside the Machus Red Fox restaurant in Bloomfield Township, Michigan, on July 30, 1975.

Some of those sources also claimed the elder Briguglio personally shot Hoffa inside a house near Detroit after the union man was lured there under the pretence of a peace meeting. None of the three were ever charged due to lack of evidence.

Sally Bugs was murdered in March 1978 outside a Little Italy social club – execution-style, with two gunmen firing several shots into him. This was just weeks before he was scheduled to testify before a federal grand jury about the Hoffa case.

The Last One

Many other suspects have been named by mob sources as being involved in the killing, all now dead. With Gabe Briguglio’s passing, there is no credible, publicly named FBI Hoffa suspect that is still alive.

Briguglio always denied any involvement in Hoffa’s disappearance. In an interview for the Fox Nation documentary “Riddle, The Search for James R. Hoffa” last year, he described the allegations that dogged him for 50 years as “a load of bull.”

Philip Conneller
Philip Conneller Senior Reporter

In Philip Conneller’s eight years with Casino.org, he has covered the gaming industry from Las Vegas to Macau and everything in between. He currently focuses his coverage on gaming law, white-collar crime, global money laundering, tribal gaming, politics, and regulation.

Philip was the original features editor for poker’s Bluff Magazine and editor for Bluff Europe, which he helped launch. His writing has also been featured in ESPN, Forbes, Time Out, The Sun, and The Daily Star, as well as iGaming Business, eGaming Review, and numerous other industry news and tech websites.

His news stories for Casino.org/news have been linked by The Washington Post, The Daily Mail, People Magazine, and Jimmy Fallon's Tonight Show, among many others.

Philip once won $20,000 with 7-2 off-suit. He has been reprimanded for unwittingly playing Elton John’s piano on two separate occasions on both sides of the Atlantic.

He became a writer because he is a lousy pianist.

Philip lives outside London with his wife and children, where he spends his time agonizing about Arsenal FC.

Contact Philip at philip.conneller@casino.org.

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