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Earhart was held on Saipan, prison worker's nephew says



 
 
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Old November 26th 17, 06:34 PM posted to alt.binaries.pictures.aviation
Miloch
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Default Earhart was held on Saipan, prison worker's nephew says

http://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/ear...rd5?li=BBnb7Kz

HAGATNA, Guam — A man with ties to Saipan shared information that promotes a
theory that Amelia Earhart was brought to the island and held prisoner 80 years
ago.

William “Bill” Sablan, who lives on Chamorro, said his uncle Tun Akin Tuho
worked at the prison where Amelia Earhart and Fred Noonan were taken prisoner in
Saipan.

The History Channel shared the theory that the two were taken prisoner in a
recent TV special called Amelia Earhart: The Lost Evidence.

Eighty years after Earhart made her voyage around the world, people are still
trying to figure out what happened to the famed pilot.

The theory shared by History’s TV special says Earhart was captured and executed
on Saipan by the Empire of Japan. The U.S. government and military knew it (and
even found and exhumed her body). And both governments have been lying about it
ever since.

Sablan’s uncle’s story fits this theory.

In 1971, he was speaking with his uncle and cousin about his dream of becoming a
pilot when his uncle mentioned the people that were held prisoner in Saipan.

His uncle described an American woman and man taken to a Saipan prison in the
mid-1930s by ship. He said they were found with a plane on a southern Pacific
Island under Japanese control.

Sablan said Earhart was brought to Saipan, for it was a hub for the Japanese.

His uncle said that he remembers the woman and man because Caucasian people were
rare on Saipan. The prison was usually quiet, but the pair's arrival caused a
commotion.

“They had no reason to be there,” Sablan said.

His uncle said the plane they were flying was dropped somewhere in the ocean
before coming to Saipan.

The uncle said that the two were in the Saipan prison for two or three days
before they were killed.

Sablan said it's possible the U.S. found and relocated the remains.

According to news files, in 1960 a CBS radio man, Fred Goerner, spoke with at
least a dozen reliable witnesses from Saipan, who shared that before the war,
two white people arrived on Saipan — described as “flyers” or “spies” — and they
were held in the Japanese jail.

They said the flyers were tall and one of them was a woman, but her hair was cut
short and she was wearing men’s clothing, files state.

The year was 1937, the same year Earhart and Noonan were lost.

The History TV special theory rests on an ambiguous photograph, said to have
been taken in 1937, that might show Earhart and Noonan alive on a dock in the
Marshall Islands. At the time, the islands were controlled by Japan.

A Japanese military history blogger Kota Yamano undermined a new theory that
Amelia Earhart survived a crash in the Pacific Ocean during her historic
attempted around-the-world flight in 1937.

The history blogger posted the same photograph that formed the backbone of a
History channel documentary that argued that Earhart was alive in July 1937 —
but the book the photo was in was apparently published two years before the
famed aviator disappeared.

A retired federal agent said he discovered the image in 2012 in the National
Archives in College Park, Md. The blogger said he found the same image digitized
in Japan's National Diet Library.

The disappearance of Earhart and Noonan on July 2, 1937, in the Western Pacific
Ocean has been the subject of continuing searches, research and debate.

A longstanding theory is that the famed pilot ran out of gas and crashed into
deep ocean waters northwest of Howland Island, a tiny speck in the South Pacific
that she and Noonan missed.

The mystery surrounding her disappearance continues to keep her memory alive and
remains one of history’s greatest mysteries.





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