MAFIA VICTIM
The Day My Father Disappeared—and the 24-Year Investigation That Revealed Why
By Wayne B. Warrington Jr.
On May 10, 1971, my father disappeared.
His name was Wayne Barton Warrington Sr. He was forty-eight years old: a World War II veteran, a former Eisenhower White House aide, an Arizona public servant, a husband, a father, and at the time of his disappearance, the director of public affairs for the National Association of Food Chains in Washington, D.C.
To the public, he was a respected man whose disappearance became a baffling national mystery.
To me, he was my father.
I was fourteen years old when he vanished. Old enough to understand fear. Old enough to understand that my father was missing. But too young to comprehend that one event could tear open a wound in a family and leave it bleeding for decades.
My father had been traveling on business. He returned to Phoenix for a meeting, then stopped in Houston on his way back to Washington to visit a friend undergoing heart surgery. Investigators later determined that he returned his rental car at Houston Intercontinental Airport on the evening of May 10.
His luggage continued on Eastern Airlines Flight 554 to Washington.
My father did not.
His suitcase arrived without him. His credit cards were never used again. His checking account went untouched. There was no ransom demand. No body. No grave. No final telephone call. No explanation that a wife could give her children when they asked where their father had gone.
Only silence.
For years, that silence became the central mystery of my family’s life.
But my father’s disappearance did not begin in a Houston airport. It began in Washington, in the course of his work, with a product on grocery-store shelves bearing a harmless, environmentally conscious name: Ecolo-G.
The Man Before the Mystery
Before my father became a missing person, he had already lived a remarkable life of public service.
Wayne B. Warrington Sr. was born on March 9, 1923, in Denver, Colorado. During World War II, he served in the United States Army Air Corps. After the war, he completed his education and devoted himself to work involving veterans, government service, and public policy.
In 1953, he joined the Arizona State Highway Department, where he worked on traffic-safety matters. In 1954, Arizona Governor Howard Pyle appointed him Commissioner of Public Welfare.
In 1956, my father moved to Washington, D.C., as Director of the Veterans Division of the Republican National Committee, helping mobilize veteran support for President Dwight D. Eisenhower’s re-election campaign.
Then, in February 1957, Howard Pyle, serving in the Eisenhower administration, brought my father into the White House as a Special Assistant tasked with intergovernmental relations with state Governors.
The official records preserved by the Dwight D. Eisenhower Presidential Library confirm his White House service from 1957 through 1959. His work involved federal-state relations, government efficiency, transportation, education, natural resources, infrastructure, unemployment compensation, veterans’ matters, and briefing materials involving governors and national policy.
He was also known as a speechwriter for the President and a man trusted to work in the background where discretion and judgment mattered.
My father was not a celebrity politician. He was not someone seeking the spotlight. He was a public servant—a man whose life had been built around duty, loyalty, government, and the belief that doing the right thing still mattered.
After leaving the White House, he returned to Arizona, later heading the Arizona Motor Vehicles Division and becoming involved in Senator Barry Goldwater’s 1964 presidential campaign.
By 1971, he had returned to Washington as director of public affairs for the National Association of Food Chains, a major trade association representing grocery-store operators across the country.
That position would place him in the path of something far darker than ordinary politics or industry controversy.
The Detergent Called Ecolo-G
In the early 1970s, environmental awareness was changing the American marketplace. Consumers were becoming concerned about pollution, chemical exposure, and phosphates in household products. Manufacturers responded with products promoted as safer, cleaner, and more environmentally responsible.
One of those products was Ecolo-G, a laundry detergent sold through companies including Ecology Corporation of America and North American Chemical Corporation.
The name sounded reassuring. The marketing suggested a product aligned with public health and environmental responsibility. However, Ecology Corporation served as a front for the Genovese crime family.
The federal record later revealed serious concerns.
In March 1972, the Federal Trade Commission entered an order involving Ecology Corporation of America, North American Chemical Corporation, and their advertising agency concerning representations made about Ecolo-G. The FTC complaint stated that the product had been represented as safe and not hazardous, and that consumers had been led to believe no special precautions were necessary.
The federal proceeding identified Ecolo-G as a hazardous substance requiring precautions to prevent swallowing it or allowing contact with eyes and skin. The companies were ordered to cease misrepresenting that the detergent was safe, not hazardous, or approved by any government agency.
My father became involved before that federal action was resolved.
As public affairs director for the National Association of Food Chains, he learned of consumer complaints and safety concerns involving Ecolo-G. Acting through his position, he sent a national telegram urging grocery-store members to suspend sales of the detergent.
On its face, that should have been a straightforward consumer-protection action: if a product raised legitimate safety questions, remove it from shelves until those questions were answered.
But Ecolo-G was not merely a consumer-product controversy.
The detergent business had become entangled with organized crime.
A United States Senate investigation into organized criminal activity in interstate commerce examined detergent sales involving North American Chemical, Best Sales, A&P, Nathan Sobol, Eugene Catena, Gerardo “Jerry” Catena, and others. The hearings addressed organized-crime influence in detergent distribution, the effort to force supermarket chains to carry products connected with mob-controlled business interests, and violence associated with resistance.
Public reporting later stated that refusal by A&P to cooperate with a mob-linked detergent operation had been associated with sixteen firebombings and the killings of two grocery-store managers.
My father had not knowingly entered a dispute with organized crime when he acted to protect consumers.
But by telling grocery stores to suspend sales of Ecolo-G, he had interfered with commercial interests tied to men who did not settle disputes through ordinary business channels.
He had touched something dangerous.
The Threat Against My Father—and Against Us
The public record tells only part of what happened next.
My father was pressured to reverse course and cooperate. He refused.
According to what he personally told me after I found him, along with the findings by the congressional investigation my mother and I attended in Washington, the threats then became direct, specific, and terrifying.
The men threatening him did not merely warn him to stay out of their business. They told him where his wife and children were. While speaking with him on the telephone, they identified the locations of members of his own family, making the message unmistakable: they knew how to reach us, and if he continued to refuse them, they could kill us whenever they chose.
My father was not dealing with a vague fear. He was dealing with people who had demonstrated that they knew where his children could be found.
He also told me that he had verified through his counter-parts at the FDA, the deaths involving individuals who had offered far less opposition than he had. He understood that these threats were not theatrical intimidation. They were backed by a history of violence.
Later, after my father’s story became public, I told a newspaper reporter that my father “realistically believed they were out there.”
Those words were accurate, but standing alone they were inadequate.
They did not explain that my father understood the people threatening him had demonstrated knowledge of his wife’s and children’s whereabouts. They did not explain that he knew other men had already died for offering lesser resistance. They did not explain that a man who has been threatened by organized crime does not suddenly become safe simply because months or years pass.
Murders has no expiration date.
My father did not need to have witnessed a killing to remain dangerous to the men he feared. He had opposed their interests. He had refused their pressure. He was scheduled to testify before congress as to his knowledge of the depth of organized crime within the Food and Drug markets. He knew enough to understand what was at stake. In his mind, that made him a threat to them for as long as he lived.
And his family remained the easiest way to reach him.
As the danger escalated, my father faced a choice no husband or father should ever be forced to make.
He could remain visible, continue his career, return home to his wife and children, and risk leading men capable of violence directly to us.
Or he could disappear and pray that if he removed himself, along with his pending testimony, he would also remove the reason to harm his family.
On May 10, 1971, my father made that choice. He disappeared.
A Death Without a Body
To the world, my father had vanished from an airport.
To our family, it felt as though he had died without leaving a body behind.
There was no funeral. No burial. No final goodbye. No place to go and grieve. Instead, there were unanswered questions that returned every day.
Was he alive?
Had he been abducted?
Had he been murdered?
Had he been buried somewhere under a name no one knew?
Would someone someday explain why a husband and father simply vanished?
Police and the FBI could find no direct evidence of his murder, and even with the mob claiming credit for his death in order to force others in authority to release the detergent back onto the market, we simply had to wait for physical evidence. After seven years, he was declared legally dead.
But a declaration of death does not end the suffering when there is no certainty behind it. It does not quiet the mind of a young boy wondering what happened to his father. It does not erase the possibility that somewhere, somehow, the truth still exists.
The loss of my father altered the course of my life.
I had once looked toward a future in law, politics, and public service—the worlds my father had inhabited. Instead, I found myself drawn into investigation. I needed answers. I needed to know what had happened to him. I needed to understand whether my father had been murdered, forced into hiding, or swallowed by something even larger than the threats we knew about.
I did not know then that the search for my father would become a twenty-four-year investigation into the organized crime forces that had destroyed my family.
The Son Who Refused to Let the Case Die
During my early career in the investigative industry, I devoted years to my father’s disappearance case.
I did not approach it as an old family story or a faded newspaper mystery. I worked it as an investigation. I traced records. I interviewed witnesses. I followed connections involving the detergent industry, organized crime, Washington, Houston, the Rental Car Employee being the last person to see him alive, and the events that had surrounded my father in the weeks and months before he vanished.
What I uncovered went far beyond anything the public ever read in a newspaper.
Over the course of that investigation, I obtained firsthand testimony concerning the Genovese crime family’s involvement in the events surrounding my father’s disappearance. I learned of neighbors who had witnessed evidence of a break-in at our family home. I developed information concerning surveillance teams watching our home in Bethesda, Maryland. I learned that the threats had not simply evaporated after my father disappeared; according to the evidence I developed, intimidation continued against individuals who stepped into matters connected with the work he had left behind.
I also discovered that pursuing the truth carried its own danger.
In Houston, where my father had last been publicly seen before his disappearance, I encountered threats and interference from law-enforcement individuals whom I understood to be attempting to stop my investigation rather than assist in solving it. I learned the last person to see him alive, a Hertz Car Rental Clerk, had disappeared herself and somehow ended up being protected by local law enforcement and never listed in the FBI’s interview reports as being contacted.
That realization was chilling.
As a son, I had spent years hoping that the institutions responsible for protecting the public might eventually help explain what happened to my father. Instead, I encountered individuals within law enforcement whom I believed were attempting to bury the investigation and their short and sweet “leave this alone or you will lose your license” position was not that of a friendly encounter with a department that should be supportive of my efforts.
But even that did not prepare me for the most terrifying moment of my search.
It came through a man who spent months becoming my friend.
He did not approach me as an enemy. He did not threaten me in some obvious way that would have immediately exposed him. He took the more calculated path. He entered my life slowly. He gained my confidence. He spent time beside me. He listened. He observed. He learned what I knew and what evidence I had accumulated. He became my friend.
Then, after months of that manufactured friendship, he told me the truth.
He disclosed that the relationship had been arranged. He had been placed close to me for the purpose of determining how much evidence I had gathered against the Genovese crime family and whether that evidence could damage them.
And if I had enough evidence to pose a threat, he told me, he was to remove me from the equation. He reminded me that I had a son myself, and the family knew this.
There are moments in a person’s life when the world changes in a single breath.
For years, I had been investigating the threats that had driven my father from his wife and children. I had been trying to understand the fear that could cause a man to abandon his identity and live underground for nearly two decades.
Then I found myself sitting beside a man who told me that I, too, could be eliminated if I had learned too much.
In that moment, my father’s fear was no longer something I had to reconstruct from records or conversations.
I understood it.
The danger had reached me.
The same shadow that had fallen over my father’s life was now standing inside mine.
And eventually, it reached toward my own child.
As my investigation continued, efforts were made to redirect my focus away from what had happened to my father and toward the protection of my son, Wayne III. Whether intended to silence me, frighten me, or force me to choose between the truth and my child’s safety, the effect was unmistakable.
I was now confronting the same impossible question my father had confronted in 1971:
How far do you pursue the truth when the people you are pursuing make it clear that your child may be the price of continuing?
For the first time, I understood the agony behind my father’s decision.
That understanding did not erase the pain of losing him. It did not give back the childhood years his disappearance had taken from me. But it forced me to see him not merely as the father who vanished, but as a father trapped in a terror that had finally reached into my own life.
While this interaction resulted in my coming into an agreement with this individual, the case remained alive in my heart and mind because it had never been merely an investigation. It was my father. It was my mother. It was my childhood. It was the destruction of a family by a crime family who believed fear could erase the truth.
I needed to know what had happened to him. Then, after nearly eighteen years, I finally found him alive—and it happened by accident, through a fluke of fate: a government employee pushed the wrong button on a computer while updating Social Security payment records.
Finding My Father
The truth was almost impossible to absorb.
My father had not been murdered in 1971.
He had disappeared deliberately, knowing that there were powers within the government he could not trust, and those that would keep his disappearance a secret for reasons of National Security.
For nearly eighteen years, Wayne B. Warrington Sr. had lived under assumed identities, moving through parts of the United States and Mexico before ultimately living in the Sacramento, California, area. The man who had once served in the Eisenhower White House, directed public affairs for a national food-industry association, advised political leaders, and lived a public life of responsibility had reduced his existence to anonymity.
He worked low-profile jobs. He avoided the people and places connected to his past. He lived with the fear that if he resurfaced, the people he believed were hunting him would find him—or use his family to punish him.
In 1988, while testing a database during my investigative work, I typed in my own name without including “Jr.” The search produced information that led me toward someone using my father’s name. Eventually, I discovered that Social Security benefits were being collected under his identity and sent through general delivery in Sacramento.
My sisters and I attempted to locate him through the post office. When we could not make direct contact after weeks of surveillance, I left copies of my ID and a letter for him with a postal official.
A day later, my father called.
After almost eighteen years, the voice that had been missing from my life was suddenly there again.
There is no simple way to describe what it means to find a father you have mourned, searched for, questioned, and imagined dead for nearly two decades.
Relief does not arrive alone.
It comes with bitterness. With grief. With disbelief. With a thousand stolen moments suddenly rushing back all at once. Birthdays he had missed. Holidays. Advice never given. Years in which his children became parents and was for me an adult without him. Years in which my mother lived without her husband.
I finally had my father back.
But I had also finally learned the depth of what had been taken from all of us.
He told me why he had disappeared. He told me about the threats. He told me that the danger had included his wife and children. He told me why he believed staying away was the only choice that could protect us.
My father had not stopped loving us.
He had disappeared because he loved us enough to believe that removing himself from our lives might save them.
Reuniting My Parents
One of the most meaningful things I was able to do after finding my father was reunite my parents.
They had been separated for nearly eighteen years.
Neither had remarried.
My father had lived underground, isolated by fear and secrecy. My mother had lived without answers, without closure, and without the husband whose disappearance had left our family in a permanent state of uncertainty.
When they were finally brought together again, I witnessed something I will carry with me for the rest of my life.
It was as though the eighteen years apart briefly disappeared.
Watching them together, I saw what looked like two high school sweethearts reunited after a lifetime of separation. They were older. They were wounded. They had been robbed of more time than any husband and wife should ever lose.
But the love and spiritual connection between them was still there.
It was immediate. It was gentle. It was soulful.
The criminal element that had driven my father into hiding had stolen nearly eighteen years from their marriage. They had stolen nearly eighteen years from his children. They had stolen the ordinary moments that make up a family’s life.
But they had not destroyed the love.
For a brief period, my father was no longer simply a missing person, a former White House aide living under an alias, or the subject of an investigation I had carried for most of my adult life.
He was my father again.
He was my mother’s husband again.
And our family finally understood the truth of his disappearance.
My father had not walked away from his family.
He had sacrificed his life with us because he believed it was the only way to protect ours.
By the time we found him, he was gravely ill with emphysema and hiding it from me. He wanted me to see him strong and able to take care of his wife without my help. My mother remained with him in northern California during the months before his death.
Wayne B. Warrington Sr. died in Sacramento on January 3, 1989. I was there, holding his hand and whispering to him, letting him know it was all right now: “I’ve got our family.” With that, he passed in peace.
I had found him only about seven months before his death.
After eighteen years of searching, the time we were given back was measured in months.
The Story Becomes Public
I did not immediately reveal the truth publicly after finding my father.
He was still afraid.
Even after all those years in hiding, even while dying of emphysema, my father remained convinced that the threat had not simply vanished with time. I respected that fear because by then I had experienced enough in my own investigation to understand that it was not an irrational fear.
In 1991, approximately two years after my father’s death, his story became public.
The Arizona Republic reported the story, which was republished nationally by The Washington Post. The New York Times also reported that the former White House aide had hidden from the mob for eighteen years.
The headlines captured the extraordinary outline of the story: a former White House aide disappeared in 1971; his luggage arrived in Washington without him; his family believed him dead; nearly eighteen years later, his son found him living under assumed identities; and fear of organized-crime retaliation had driven him underground.
But those articles could only report a fraction of the full story.
They reported that my father feared the mob.
They did not fully explain that the threats had included the lives of his wife and children, or that the threats came not simply from the mob, but also from the highest level of the government which created a totally different element of danger that he did not want our family to be subjected to.
They reported that I found him.
They did not report the full extent of the twenty-four-year investigation, the witnesses, the surveillance information, the break-in evidence, the interference I experienced, or the man who spent months gaining my trust before telling me he had been assigned to determine what I knew and eliminate me if necessary.
They reported that my father had hidden for eighteen years.
They could not explain what those eighteen years did to the family he left behind.
The newspapers documented the disappearance.
My family lived the case.
The Inheritance My Father Left Me
My father’s disappearance permanently altered the direction of my life.
As a young man, I once considered a path connected with law, government, and perhaps politics. Those were worlds my father had known. He had served in public office, worked in the White House, participated in national politics, and built a career rooted in public responsibility. At 14 years old, my path, my education, my service within the Federal government had already been set in stone.
But after what happened to him, my life took another direction.
Instead of Georgetown University, I studied law in Arizona, and I became an investigator and consumer advocate because I had seen, inside my own family, what can happen when dangerous products, organized crime, intimidation, corruption, and institutional failure converge.
My father took action because he believed consumers were being placed at risk.
He disappeared because he believed his family was being placed at risk.
I followed up on the investigation because I refused to allow threats, silence, fear, or the passage of time to become the final version of what happened to him.
For more than forty years, my professional life has centered on protecting consumers, investigating fraud, exposing wrongdoing, and helping people recover what has been taken from them. Through my consumer-advocacy work and the LostMoney Consumer Reports resources published at waynewarrington.com, that work has helped millions of Americans locate and recover billions of dollars in lost, missing, or unclaimed funds.
But the origin of that work was never simply professional ambition.
It was personal.
It began with a fourteen-year-old boy whose father disappeared.
It grew through the years I spent trying to discover what had happened to him.
And it became permanent when I finally learned that my father had sacrificed almost eighteen years of his life with his family because he believed he was protecting us from the mafia willing to kill.
There will be people who read this story and assume that such threats belong only in movies, novels, or old crime dramas. They may believe that if every detail did not appear in a newspaper article or a government report, then it could not have happened.
My family learned otherwise.
Sometimes the public record contains only the surface of the truth.
Sometimes threats are real.
Sometimes organized crime reaches into ordinary homes, marriages, and children’s lives in ways the public never sees.
Sometimes the father who disappears is not abandoning his family.
Sometimes he is sacrificing himself for them.
Wayne B. Warrington Sr. was my father.
He was a veteran, a public servant, a White House aide, a husband, and a father.
He was a man who acted to protect consumers and then lived the remainder of his life believing that doing so had placed everyone he loved in danger.
He was also a victim of the Mafia.
The men who threatened him took nearly eighteen years of his life with his wife and children.
They did not take his love for us.
They did not take the truth.
And they did not stop his son from telling the story.
Documentation and Supporting References
This article is a true-story account written by Wayne Warrington., son of Wayne B. Warrington Sr. It is based upon public government records, published newspaper accounts, congressional materials, Federal Trade Commission records, the author’s approximately twenty-four-year personal investigation, witness information developed during that investigation, the author’s direct experiences, and conversations with his father after locating him in hiding.
The public sources listed below document significant portions of the historical record, including Wayne B. Warrington Sr.’s government service, the Ecolo-G detergent matter, the Senate investigation into organized-crime activity involving detergent sales and supermarket chains, his 1971 disappearance, his years in hiding, his death, and his discovery by his family.
The complete story includes evidence and firsthand experiences that were never fully reported in public media accounts, including the specific threats described by Wayne B. Warrington Sr., investigative information developed by Wayne B. Warrington Jr., and direct encounters experienced during the investigation. The disappearance of Wayne B Warrington, Sr created national media interest and a major network interest in a true story movie series. The movie rights and contracts were abandoned when Wayne B. Warrington Jr. would not release creative rights to allow the studio/network to remove the federal government’s cover up as to the 1971 White House involvement with members of the mafia. Sometimes, some elements never come to light, as they should.
Public Record References
1. Dwight D. Eisenhower Presidential Library — Wayne B. Warrington Records, 1953–1959
Official archival record confirming Wayne B. Warrington’s service as Director of the Veterans Division of the Republican National Committee in 1956 and as Special Assistant in the White House Office from 1957 through 1959.
https://www.eisenhowerlibrary.gov/research/finding-aids/warrington-wayne-b
PDF Finding Aid:
https://www.eisenhowerlibrary.gov/sites/default/files/finding-aids/pdf/warrington-wayne-records.pdf
2. The Washington Post / Arizona Republic — “1971 Disappearance of D.C. Lobbyist Solved by Son, a Private Investigator: Fear of Mob Drove Former White House Staff Aide Underground,” November 17–18, 1991
Published reporting documenting Wayne Warrington Sr.’s disappearance, his position with the National Association of Food Chains, his last known public appearance at Houston Intercontinental Airport, the arrival of his luggage in Washington without him, the Ecolo-G detergent matter, his years living under false identities, his death in Sacramento, and his discovery by his son.
3. The New York Times — “Ex-White House Aide Hid From Mob for 18 Years, Son Says,” November 30, 1991
Published national account reporting that Wayne Warrington Sr., a former White House aide, lived in hiding for eighteen years because of fear of organized-crime retaliation.
https://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9D0CEFDD153AF933A05752C1A967958260
4. Federal Trade Commission — In the Matter of Ecology Corporation of America, North American Chemical Corporation, and Venet Advertising Inc., Docket C-2179, Decision and Order, March 30, 1972
Official federal proceeding concerning advertising and safety representations made about Ecolo-G detergent. The FTC order identified Ecology Corporation of America and North American Chemical Corporation as sellers and distributors of Ecolo-G and prohibited representations that the detergent was safe, not hazardous, required no special precautions, or had received government approval.
5. Federal Register — Federal Trade Commission Consent Order Concerning Ecolo-G Detergent, April 20, 1972
Federal publication reporting the FTC order concerning Ecolo-G and the prohibited safety and government-approval representations associated with its marketing.
https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/FR-1972-04-20/pdf/FR-1972-04-20.pdf
6. United States Senate Committee on Commerce — Effects of Organized Criminal Activity on Interstate and Foreign Commerce, Hearings Held October 5, 6, 7, 8, and 15, 1971; Published 1972
Congressional hearing record addressing organized-crime activity affecting interstate commerce, including references to Ecolo-G, North American Chemical, Best Sales, A&P, Nathan Sobol, Eugene Catena, Gerardo Catena, detergent distribution, organized-crime influence, and supermarket-chain resistance.
https://books.google.com/books?id=FRDxu__U_9AC
7. University of Arizona Libraries, Arizona Historical Indexes — Wayne Barton Warrington
Archival listing identifying Don Bolles’ 1973 reporting on the disappearance of Wayne Warrington, reflecting the public mystery that remained unresolved after his disappearance.
https://uamr.lib.arizona.edu/subject-headings/warrington-wayne-barton
8. Time Magazine — “Products: As the Soapers’ World Turns,” March 7, 1971
Contemporary reporting concerning the market for environmentally promoted detergents and North American Chemical’s distribution of Ecolo-G during the period preceding Wayne Warrington Sr.’s disappearance.
https://time.com/archive/6838641/products-as-the-soapers-world-turns/
9. WayneWarrington.com — “Mafia Victim”
The author’s published account and continuing preservation of the life story of Wayne B. Warrington Sr., his disappearance, and the family legacy arising from those events.