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The '''Hoos family''' is the fourth family of [[De Vrienden]]. The family is associated with industrial labor, factory operation, and enforcement-oriented economic activity. Hoos family members have been linked to heavy industry, hazardous materials, and coercive security structures, primarily in Germany and later in the Netherlands.
{{Infobox person
| name              = Eef Hoos
| image              =
| caption            =
| birth_name        = Evert Hendrik Hoos
| birth_date        = {{birth date|1946|6|12}}
| birth_place        = [[The Hague]]
| nationality        = [[Netherlands|Dutch]]
| other_names        = The Hague [[Al Capone]]
| occupation        = [[Entrepreneur]]
| known_for          = Leadership of the debt-collection and enforcement office [[Toetanchamon]]; founder of [[Themis]]
| father            = [[Hendrik Hoos]]
| spouse            =
| children          =
| conviction        = Attempted attack (aanslagpleging)
| criminal_penalty  = 14 years (sentence)
| imprisonment      = mid 1989 – early 1995
| associates        = Evgeny Gur
| vehicles          = 2014 white [[Mercedes-Benz SLS AMG|Mercedes SLS]]; 1995 white [[GMC Yukon]] (dually wheels, closed windows)
}}


== Origins ==
'''Evert Hendrik (Eef) Hoos''' (born 12 June 1946) is a Dutch criminal figure and the fourth member of [[De Vrienden]]. He is commonly known by the nickname “The Hague Al Capone”. Hoos became associated with the Hague-based debt-collection and enforcement office [[Toetanchamon]], and later founded the ex-detainee advocacy organisation [[Themis]].
Historical records place the origins of the Hoos family primarily in Germany, with a smaller early presence in the Netherlands. During the 19th century, family members were active in regions associated with steel production, chemical processing, and large-scale industrial manufacturing.


By the early 20th century, the family had established a reputation for physically demanding factory work and involvement in high-risk industrial environments.
== Early life ==
Hoos was born and raised in [[The Hague]]. He is the son of [[Hendrik Hoos]]. During his youth, he developed a reputation in his neighborhood for disruptive and destructive behavior. Among these incidents were acts in which he detonated so-called “poop boxes” that were left outside homes, causing the contents to scatter across the surrounding area.


== Military involvement (1916–1945) ==
Between 1916 and 1945, a significant number of Hoos family members served in the German armed forces. Service included industrial support units, logistics, engineering, and security formations.


During the period of the German Reich, many Hoos family members joined the [[SS (Nazi Germany)|SS]]. Several attained senior or command-level positions, particularly in areas related to industrial oversight, logistics, and internal security rather than frontline combat.
== Toetanchamon ==
In the 1980s, Hoos became the public face and operational leader of [[Toetanchamon]], a Hague debt-collection office known for intimidation and violence against debtors. The organisation was linked to a series of arson attacks and bombings in and around The Hague in the late 1980s.


After 1945, military involvement among the Hoos family sharply declined. The majority of family members did not participate in any armed forces following the end of World War II.
After negative coverage in the ''Haagsche Courant'', a car bomb exploded near the publisher Sijthoff Pers. Following the refusal of a permit for a security company connected to Toetanchamon, additional attacks followed, including incidents targeting a police station and a social services office.


== Postwar relocation ==
During the same period, Hoos promoted a plan to build a large windmill tourist attraction in the harbour area of [[Scheveningen]], described by him as an “eighth wonder of the world”. The plan was blocked by alderman Adri Duivesteijn. In January 1989, an attempt was made to attack Duivesteijn using an explosive device hidden in a table lamp; the device failed to detonate due to a mechanical fault and was defused.
Following World War II, much of the Hoos family relocated to the Netherlands. This movement coincided with postwar reconstruction and the expansion of industrial facilities. In the Netherlands, Hoos family members became active in factories, ports, and heavy industrial zones.


== Industrial and technical activity ==
Hoos consistently denied involvement in the attacks.
Throughout their history, Hoos family members were involved in factory operations and industrial labor. Areas of activity included steelworks, heavy machinery operation, chemical processing plants, and later facilities handling dangerous liquids, explosives, and nuclear-related materials.


== Debt collection and security operations ==
== Imprisonment ==
In 1889, members of the Hoos family established a debt collection and security organization known as '''[[Toetanchamon]]'''. The organization specialized in debt recovery, gold collection, and protective services.
Hoos was imprisoned from mid 1989 until early 1995. He received a 14-year sentence in connection with attempted attack (aanslagpleging).


In 1997, '''[[Themis]]''' was founded by [[Eef Hoos]] as a replacement for Toetanchamon. Themis introduced a more centralized structure and expanded security operations.
== Themis ==
After his release, Hoos positioned himself as an advocate for (former) detainees and founded [[Themis]], an organisation aimed at supporting ex-prisoners. The organisation published a magazine titled ''The mis-Take'', distributed in prisons.


Following the establishment of Themis, several Hoos family members continued to operate smaller-scale Toetanchamon services, primarily within the Netherlands.
In 1999, a bombing destroyed the Themis office in [[Almere]]. A former employee later claimed the attack had been carried out on Hoos’s instruction. Plans to rebuild and establish an intake and housing facility for former detainees were repeatedly blocked, including an attempt to relocate to the industrial zone [[De Vaart (Almere)|De Vaart]].


== Criminal activity ==
== Portugal period ==
Historical records document repeated involvement of Hoos family members in criminal activity, particularly after World War II. Convictions include assault, armed robbery, organized violence, and acts classified as terrorism under Dutch and German law.
Following disputes and failed relocation efforts in the Netherlands, Hoos moved to the [[Algarve]] in [[Portugal]] in 2016. He established the animal crematorium “Creon Starlight”.


These activities were frequently connected to debt collection, enforcement operations, and control over industrial or logistical assets. Criminal involvement varied by individual and period but represents a recurring element in the family’s modern history.
== Role in De Vrienden ==
Hoos joined [[De Vrienden]] in 1976 as the fifth individual to enter the group. At the time of his entry, the informal order of association placed him as the fifth member chronologically.


== Work culture ==
Around 1980, the group formalised a numerical-symbolic structure linking each member to a corresponding family number. During this reorganisation, the positions of [[Lourens Schroeter]] and Hoos were reassessed. Although Schroeter had joined earlier, internal consensus determined that the Hoos family would be aligned with the number four, while the [[Schroeter family]] would be aligned with the number five.
Hoos family culture has been described as physically intensive and utilitarian. Emphasis was placed on endurance, familiarity with dangerous machinery, and direct enforcement of authority. Control was typically exercised through operational dominance of facilities, equipment, and personnel.


== Association with other principal families ==
This adjustment was not based on chronology but on the later-established symbolic framework that associated each principal family with a fixed numerical identity. From that point onward, Hoos was recognised as the fourth member within the structured identity of the five principal families.
During the early to mid-20th century, Hoos family members became acquainted with members of the [[Noord family]], [[Paap family]], [[Van Hetten family]], and [[Schroeter family]] through shared industrial environments and military-administrative overlap in Germany and the Netherlands.


These relationships developed into long-standing personal connections, later recognized as [[De Vrienden]].


== Members ==
== Vehicles ==
A comprehensive list of known Hoos family members is maintained separately.
Hoos is known to drive:
 
* a white 2014 [[Mercedes-Benz SLS AMG|Mercedes SLS]]
* [[Hoos family members]] — complete list of documented family members, categorized by era
* a white 1995 [[GMC Yukon]] fitted with dually wheels


== See also ==
== See also ==
* [[Noord family]]
* [[Hoos family]]
* [[Paap family]]
* [[Van Hetten family]]
* [[Schroeter family]]
* [[Hoos family members]]
* [[Toetanchamon]]
* [[Toetanchamon]]
* [[Themis]]
* [[Themis]]
* [[De Vrienden]]

Revision as of 10:19, 14 February 2026

Eef Hoos
Born
Evert Hendrik Hoos

(1946-06-12)June 12, 1946
Other namesThe Hague Al Capone
OccupationEntrepreneur
Known forLeadership of the debt-collection and enforcement office Toetanchamon; founder of Themis
Criminal penalty14 years (sentence)
FatherHendrik Hoos

Evert Hendrik (Eef) Hoos (born 12 June 1946) is a Dutch criminal figure and the fourth member of De Vrienden. He is commonly known by the nickname “The Hague Al Capone”. Hoos became associated with the Hague-based debt-collection and enforcement office Toetanchamon, and later founded the ex-detainee advocacy organisation Themis.

Early life

Hoos was born and raised in The Hague. He is the son of Hendrik Hoos. During his youth, he developed a reputation in his neighborhood for disruptive and destructive behavior. Among these incidents were acts in which he detonated so-called “poop boxes” that were left outside homes, causing the contents to scatter across the surrounding area.


Toetanchamon

In the 1980s, Hoos became the public face and operational leader of Toetanchamon, a Hague debt-collection office known for intimidation and violence against debtors. The organisation was linked to a series of arson attacks and bombings in and around The Hague in the late 1980s.

After negative coverage in the Haagsche Courant, a car bomb exploded near the publisher Sijthoff Pers. Following the refusal of a permit for a security company connected to Toetanchamon, additional attacks followed, including incidents targeting a police station and a social services office.

During the same period, Hoos promoted a plan to build a large windmill tourist attraction in the harbour area of Scheveningen, described by him as an “eighth wonder of the world”. The plan was blocked by alderman Adri Duivesteijn. In January 1989, an attempt was made to attack Duivesteijn using an explosive device hidden in a table lamp; the device failed to detonate due to a mechanical fault and was defused.

Hoos consistently denied involvement in the attacks.

Imprisonment

Hoos was imprisoned from mid 1989 until early 1995. He received a 14-year sentence in connection with attempted attack (aanslagpleging).

Themis

After his release, Hoos positioned himself as an advocate for (former) detainees and founded Themis, an organisation aimed at supporting ex-prisoners. The organisation published a magazine titled The mis-Take, distributed in prisons.

In 1999, a bombing destroyed the Themis office in Almere. A former employee later claimed the attack had been carried out on Hoos’s instruction. Plans to rebuild and establish an intake and housing facility for former detainees were repeatedly blocked, including an attempt to relocate to the industrial zone De Vaart.

Portugal period

Following disputes and failed relocation efforts in the Netherlands, Hoos moved to the Algarve in Portugal in 2016. He established the animal crematorium “Creon Starlight”.

Role in De Vrienden

Hoos joined De Vrienden in 1976 as the fifth individual to enter the group. At the time of his entry, the informal order of association placed him as the fifth member chronologically.

Around 1980, the group formalised a numerical-symbolic structure linking each member to a corresponding family number. During this reorganisation, the positions of Lourens Schroeter and Hoos were reassessed. Although Schroeter had joined earlier, internal consensus determined that the Hoos family would be aligned with the number four, while the Schroeter family would be aligned with the number five.

This adjustment was not based on chronology but on the later-established symbolic framework that associated each principal family with a fixed numerical identity. From that point onward, Hoos was recognised as the fourth member within the structured identity of the five principal families.


Vehicles

Hoos is known to drive:

See also