July 30th, 1975, 2:45 in the afternoon. The parking lot of the Makos Red Fox restaurant, Bloomfield Township, Michigan. Jimmy Huffa is standing by his green Pontiac, chain smoking, checking his watch. He’s supposed to meet two men, Anthony Gia Colon, Anthony Provenzano. A sit down to bury the hatchet.
Hawa picks up a pay phone. He calls his wife. He says, “Where the hell is Tony Jacqu alone? Nobody’s here.” Then he hangs up. Then he gets into a maroon Mercury marquee with three other men. He is never seen again. Nobody, no grave, no evidence. The most powerful labor leader in American history vanishes into thin air on a Wednesday afternoon in broad daylight, surrounded by witnesses.
And for the next 50 years, the FBI will chase ghosts. 14 years later, in a federal prison cell, a man named Donald Franco picks up a phone. He’s a Greek Italian hitman with cold blue eyes and a Manhattan accent. The mob called him Tony the Greek. He killed for the Lucazi family. He killed for the Gambino family.
He killed for the Westies, the Irish gang out of Hell’s Kitchen. And on that day in 1989, talking to a reporter from Playboy magazine, Tony the Greek says four words that detonate inside the Justice Department. >> I killed Jimmy Hoffa. I killed Jimmy Ha. This is the story of the freelance assassin who worked for three different crime families at the same time.
A man who beat six separate murder charges before he ever flipped. a man who claimed to have personally pulled the trigger on the most famous missing person in American history. And the FBI, after taking his confession, after debriefing him for months, after polygraphing him twice, did something almost no one talks about.
They buried it. But here’s what the public never understood. Tony the Greek wasn’t lying about everything. The question is what he was lying about and what he wasn’t. You have to understand who Donald Franco was before you can understand why three crime families trusted him with their dirtiest work.
He was born November 10th, 1938 in Hackinack, New Jersey. His father, George, had come off a ship from Chios, Greece in 1919. Worked the boiler rooms at Bristol Meyers in Newark. Married an Italian immigrant named Irene. She died giving birth to Donald. The boy never knew her. His father remarried, moved to Louisiana to drill oil wells, failed, and died in 1943 at 52 years old. Donald was five.
His paternal uncle, Augustine, 28 years old at the time, legally adopted him, painted bridges for a living, moved the family to a cold water flat on 47th Street between 10th and 11th Avenue, Hell’s Kitchen, Manhattan. Now, think about that address. 47th Street between 10th and 11th in 1949.
That neighborhood was the Irish mob’s beating heart. The same blocks that would eventually produce Jimmy Kunan, Mickey Featherstone, and the Westies. Donald Franco grew up walking past the men who would one day be his employers. He went to a Greek Orthodox school. He came home to the toughest 20 square blocks in New York City.
By the time he was a teenager, he was running with thieves, working the docks, learning who paid and who collected. He joined the Navy, became a boxer, came back to New York harder, sharper, and angrier. By the early 1960s, Franos was a pimp, a heroin dealer, a burglar, a lone shark, and most importantly, a man who would do work nobody else would touch.

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He didn’t care who paid him. Italian, Irish, Jewish, it didn’t matter. He killed for money. He killed for favors. He killed for nothing more than the satisfaction of a clean job. By his own count, before he was 40 years old, he had murdered between 30 and 40 men. Now, here’s the first thing that made Tony the Greek different.
The mafia, the real mafia, the five families, they had rules. Made men only. Sicilian blood, take an oath, burn the saint card. Franos had none of that. He was half Greek, half Italian. He could never be made. He could never sit at the table. But because of that, he was the perfect weapon. He had no family loyalty, no oath to break, no boss to protect.
The Italians could use him for jobs they couldn’t trust to their own. And when it was over, they could deny him. His reputation started inside the prison system. In 1963, Franos was sent to Attica for armed robbery. And what most people don’t know about prison life in the 1960s and ‘7s is this. The mafia ran it. The wardens didn’t run Atteka.
The captains didn’t run Atteka. The Italian crews on the inside ran Atteka. And there was a corrupt system inside the New York State Department of Corrections that nobody talks about. Phony furlows. Here is how it worked. A guard, a sergeant, a clerk, someone with access to the paperwork was on the take. For somewhere between $5,000 and $20,000, depending on who needed what, an inmate could be marked as transferred or marked as in the infirmary or marked as on a work detail.
The paperwork said one thing, the reality was another. The inmate walked out a side door, did a job in the outside world, and came back before lights out. The prison logs covered it up. And the perfect alibi was sitting right there in the official record. Donald Franco couldn’t have killed anyone. He was in prison.
That according to Franco and to the authors of the 1993 book contract killer that he cooperated with is how he committed murders for the Luces family while sitting in a maximum security cell. That is how he claimed to have pulled the trigger on Luces associate Richard Bello in 1974. That is the system he says delivered him to the Hawa hit in 1975.
Now whether you believe that or not, here is what is documented. Franco was convicted of two murders. He was charged with six. He beat four of them outright. He pleaded out on the others. And during the same decade, he was supposedly behind bars. He was being paid by three separate organizations.
The Lucesy family used him for internal cleanups. The Gambino family used him on subcontract through Paul Castellano’s people. And the Westies, the Irish mob that owned Hell’s Kitchen, used him for everything from drug debt collection to wet work that Jimmy Counan didn’t want his own people doing. The Westies. You have to understand the Westies to understand Franco’s.
Jimmy Counan, the leader, was born and raised on the same blocks Franco walked as a kid, 47th Street, 10th Avenue. The Irish bars and the Greek lunch counters. Kunan was a year younger than Franco. They knew each other since they were teenagers. Kunan ran the most violent street crew in New York history.
The Westies killed people, dismembered them, and threw the pieces into the Hudson River. Kunan once said, “It was harder to convict you of murder if there was no body.” So, the Westies stopped leaving bodies. By the late 1970s, the Westies were operating under a formal alliance with the Gambino family, then run by Paul Castellano. Kunan reported to a Gambino captain named Roy Deo.
And Deo, for the record, ran the most prolific dismemberment crew in the history of American organized crime. This is the world Tony the Greek moved through. Three families, one man. No oath to any of them, just the price per job. In 1974, Franos committed the murder that would put him away for the longest stretch of his life.
Richard Bolo, a Lucesi family associate. The hit went down in October of that year, and according to the New York Times reporting at the time, Bolo was killed inside the Clinton Correctional Facility at Danamura, stabbed to death. Bolo had been the first inmate sentenced for the Attica prison riots of 1971.

He was a problem. He was talking. So, the Lucasi family put out the order. And the man they sent it through, according to multiple accounts, was Donald Franco. The prison killing was the kind of contract only Franco could fulfill. He was already inside. He had access. He had the courage. He had the calm. But here is where the story gets interesting.
Because the Bleo hit happened in October 1974. Hafa disappeared 9 months later. And Franco would claim for the next 35 years that the same prison system that let him kill Bleo also let him fly to Detroit to kill Hawa. Let’s talk about the Hawa confession, the one the FBI buried. According to Franco, the contract on Jimmy Hoffa came down from the Genevvisi family, specifically from Anthony Serno and Anthony Provenzano, the New Jersey Teamsters boss who had been Ha’s ally and then his enemy.
Provenano had been with Hawa in federal prison at Lewisburg in the late 1960s. They’d fought over a pension. Hawa wanted his Teamsters union back. Provenano didn’t want him to have it. The mob wanted Provenzano to win because a controllable Teamsters meant access to billions of dollars in pension funds.
Franos said the hit team was four men himself, Jimmy Kunan, the Westy’s boss, John Sullivan. And later a fourth man, Joseph Sullivan, brought in for cleanup. The plan, according to Franco’s, was simple. Hawa would be lured to a private house in Detroit, a house belonging to Anthony Gia Cologne, the Detroit mob captain Hawa was supposed to meet at the Makus Red Fox.
The lure was a man Hawa trusted absolutely. Chucky O’Brien, Hawa’s foster son in [clears throat] everything but legal paperwork. The man Hawa had raised, the man Hawa would never suspect. Franco said Hafa arrived at the house expecting Jacalone and Provenzano. Instead, he found Kunan and Franos waiting.
Two men with suppressed 22 caliber pistols, the same caliber the FBI’s organized crime profilers had identified as the mob’s preferred headshot weapon. Quiet, small entry wound. The bullet bounces around the skull and never exits. Perfect for indoor work. According to Franos, Kunan fired first.
Two rounds to the back of Hoffa’s head. Hawa went down. Franco finished it. Then they did what the Westies always did. They dismembered the body. Kunan, Sullivan, and Franos. They cut Jimmy Hoffa into pieces in the basement of that Detroit house. And here, Franco said, is where the plan got complicated. They couldn’t move the body. Not right away.
The FBI was already crawling all over Detroit looking for the most famous missing person in America. So they put the pieces in a meat locker in the basement. And there they sat for weeks, maybe months. Eventually, Franco said a fourth man, Joseph Sullivan, was brought in to dispose of the remains. The pieces were placed in a steel oil drum.
The drum was driven east across Ohio, across Pennsylvania into New Jersey, and it was buried under the construction site of a stadium that was being built right then in East Rutherford, New Jersey. Giants Stadium, section 107, under the artificial turf where the New York Football Giants would play for the next 35 years. That was the story.
That was the confession. And the FBI listened to it for hundreds of hours. You know what they did? Nothing. Officially nothing. In November 1989, Playboy magazine published Franco’s account. The story went global. The FBI’s response was carefully managed. An agent named Jim Kler, who had worked organized crime in New York for two decades, gave a quote that became the AY’s official line.
He said, quote, “When that information came to our attention, we batted it around, but we were all convinced in the end that this guy was not reliable. We were able to prove to our mind that what he was telling us couldn’t have happened because he either couldn’t have been there or he was in jail at the time.
” End quote. A retired FBI supervisor named Robert Fitzpatrick, who had monitored Hafa for years out of the Detroit field office, called the story totally, utterly laughable. He said keeping a body in a freezer for months wasn’t the mafia’s style. He said the mob killed in specific ways, strangulation.
A 45 to the midsection, a 22 to the head. Throat cut. He said they didn’t store bodies. Storage meant exposure. Exposure meant witnesses. But here is what the FBI did not tell the public in 1989. Franco was at that exact moment in the federal witness protection program. He was a cooperating witness preparing to testify against John Gotti and the Gambino family in the upcoming rakateeering trial.
He had passed two polygraphs about other matters. He was considered credible enough to use against the most powerful mafia boss in America. But on Hafa suddenly he wasn’t credible enough to investigate. There are two ways to read that. One way is that the FBI was telling the truth. Franos was a serial liar who was telling stories to sell books and his prison records placed him in a New York State facility during the week Hafa disappeared.
That is the official version. That is what Jerry Capi, the great New York mob reporter, has always argued. Franos was in prison. He could not have been in Detroit. Case closed. The other way to read it is darker because here is what Franco told his co-authors that the FBI did not deny. He had been on phony furlow that summer. He had been off the books.
The prison logs had been altered. And the men who could verify his absence, the corrupt corrections officers, were never interviewed. Why? Because to prove Franco’s right about Hawa, the federal government would have had to prove the New York State prison system was thoroughly compromised. They would have had to admit that men they thought they had locked up had been killing people on the outside for years.
The political damage would have been catastrophic. So, the easier path was to declare Franos a liar and move on. And here is the part that nobody can deny. The names Franco gave them all checked out. Chucky O’Brien, Hawa’s foster son. The FBI has long believed O’Brien was the lure that brought Hawa to the matches red fox.
Anthony Jakalone, the Detroit captain, confirmed central figure in the FBI’s official Hafix memo. The bureau’s internal 1976 summary of the case. Tony Provenzano, the Genevese Capo, indicted, convicted, died in prison in 1988 for unrelated murders. Jimmy Kunan, convicted on RICO charges in 1988 for the Westies prosecution.
All real, all connected, all in the right place at the right time. What Franos got wrong, what we now know was almost certainly wrong, was the burial. Giant stadium has been searched. Mythbusters scanned it with ground penetrating radar in 2003. The stadium was demolished in 2010. Nothing was found. The FBI didn’t even bother to send agents to the demolition.
They knew it was a dead end. But the rest of it, the lure, the house, the 22 caliber pistols, the dismemberment, that part matches almost every other credible hawa theory that has ever been advanced. Frank Sheran, the Irishman, would later claim he shot Hawa himself in a different Detroit house.
Shiran’s story has its own problems, including blood evidence that didn’t match. Richard Klinsky, the Iceman, would later claim he killed Hawa and stuffed him in a 55gallon drum. His story has problems, too. But every credible confession, every serious theory includes the same elements. A trusted friend lured Hawa. A small caliber weapon was used.
The body was dismembered. The remains were moved. Franco was one of four men who claimed to have done it. The other three are dead. Sharan died in 2003. Kuklinsky died in 2006. Joseph Sullivan was killed in 1993. Franos outlived them all. By the early 1990s, Tony the Greek’s run was finally ending.
six murder charges, two convictions, decades of corrupt prison furlows that the state refused to publicly acknowledge. Franco had finally decided to flip. He testified for the federal government against members of the Lucesi family. He testified about Gambino operations. He named names that prosecutors had never been able to touch.
And in exchange, he was placed in protective custody. Not full witness protection with a new identity because Franco was too wellknown, but protected status inside the federal system. In 1993, his co-authors William Hoffman and Lake Headedley published Contract Killer, the book that laid out every murder Tony the Greek had ever committed or claimed to have committed.
The book went into specifics, dates, locations, amounts of money, 45 years of organized crime told from the inside. The mob put a price on his head. He was moved again. Then again, he eventually ended up where he had started in the New York State system, Clinton Correctional Facility, Danamora, New York.
the maximum security prison so far north and so isolated they called it Little Siberia. The same prison where he had killed Richard Bleo in 1974. Franco went back inside as an old man with a beard and a heart condition and a thousand stories nobody believed. He died there on March 30th, 2011. 72 years old.
No state funeral, no mob revenge, no final confession. The official cause of death was never released. His body was claimed by no one. He was buried in an unmarked grave in upstate New York. What does it all mean? What is the truth? The truth is that Donald Franco was almost certainly responsible for far more murders than he was ever charged with.
The truth is that the New York State Department of Corrections in the 1960s and 70s was so corrupt that hitmen could walk in and out of maximum security prisons with paperwork that said they were locked up. The truth is that three different crime families used the same freelance killer and not one of them ever turned on him until he turned on them first.
The truth is that the FBI listened to Tony the Greeks Hawa confession, recorded it, polygraphed it, and then put it in a drawer where it has remained ever since. Was he there in Detroit on July 30th, 1975? The official answer is no. The unofficial answer is that nobody in a position to know has ever been willing to investigate that question seriously.
Because to investigate it would be to admit how badly the system had been compromised. Donald Franos killed for the Italians. He killed for the Irish. He killed inside prison walls and on the streets of Manhattan. He beat six murder charges by being more careful, more connected, and more useful than the men who tried to convict him.
And in the end, he died exactly the way he lived inside a cell. Surrounded by guards who didn’t trust him, watched by inmates who feared him, owing nothing to anyone. The [clears throat] Luces family didn’t claim him. The Gambinos didn’t claim him. The Westies didn’t claim him. Three families had used him.
None of them had ever made him one of their own. That was the price of being Tony the Greek. He killed his way into every room in New York, organized crime. He never sat down at any of the tables. He was a tool, a weapon, a signature on the dotted line of other men’s contracts. If you want to know what Donald Franco really was, you don’t look at the murders he committed.
You look at the names he gave up at the end. Lucasy soldiers, Gambino associates, Westies enforcers. He betrayed all three families because none of them had ever truly been his. He had no oath to break. That was always his advantage. And in the end, it was also the only thing he had to sell. The hitman who killed for three families.
The man who claimed to have killed Jimmy Hoffa. The witness who walked into federal court with 30 murders behind him and walked out with protection. He died in Little Siberia alone, taking with him the one secret the FBI did not want to hear. If you found this story compelling, hit that subscribe button.