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![]() "AMBOY, Wash. - There could be a major break in the biggest crime mystery in Northwest history.The FBI in Seattle is beginning analysis of a long-buried parachute - the same type used by skyjacker D.B. Cooper when he jumped from an Northwest Orient Airlines 727 with a 25 pound money bag containing 200-thousand dollars ransom on Thanksgiving eve 1971." http://www.koin.com/content/news/top...d-b3d4851101a4 A buried parachute suggests he lived? |
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On Tue, 25 Mar 2008 17:13:50 -0700, "gatt" wrote:
"AMBOY, Wash. - There could be a major break in the biggest crime mystery in Northwest history.The FBI in Seattle is beginning analysis of a long-buried parachute - the same type used by skyjacker D.B. Cooper when he jumped from an Northwest Orient Airlines 727 with a 25 pound money bag containing 200-thousand dollars ransom on Thanksgiving eve 1971." http://www.koin.com/content/news/top...d-b3d4851101a4 A buried parachute suggests he lived? Depends on how one defines "buried." If they find that the chute had been (for example) stuffed in a garbage bag prior to going underground, that certainly implies that the owner of the chute survived. If you think about it, an opened parachute (especially one attached to a dead person) is going to drape across the surface, not burrow below it. And if the owner WAS dead, there should be bones, etc. at the site where the chute was recovered. Ron Wanttaja |
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On Tue, 25 Mar 2008 17:13:50 -0700, "gatt"
wrote: "AMBOY, Wash. - There could be a major break in the biggest crime mystery in Northwest history.The FBI in Seattle is beginning analysis of a long-buried parachute - the same type used by skyjacker D.B. Cooper when he jumped from an Northwest Orient Airlines 727 with a 25 pound money bag containing 200-thousand dollars ransom on Thanksgiving eve 1971." http://www.koin.com/content/news/top...d-b3d4851101a4 Interesting. It could be a spoof, but who knows? A buried parachute suggests he lived? In 1980, a family on a picnic found 58-hundred dollars of the loot on a Columbia River beach, near Vancouver. How it got there is another mystery. Some scientists believed the money bag traveled down the Washougal River, which is upstream from the beach, miles from where this parachute was recently found. One quarter of the ransom suggests he died? Perhaps he survived the jump, but succommed to the elements? Have you any more specific idea of the distance between the 'chute find site, and the money beach site? |
#4
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![]() "Larry Dighera" wrote in message ... On Tue, 25 Mar 2008 17:13:50 -0700, "gatt" wrote: "AMBOY, Wash. - There could be a major break in the biggest crime mystery in Northwest history.The FBI in Seattle is beginning analysis of a long-buried parachute - the same type used by skyjacker D.B. Cooper when he jumped from an Northwest Orient Airlines 727 with a 25 pound money bag containing 200-thousand dollars ransom on Thanksgiving eve 1971." http://www.koin.com/content/news/top...d-b3d4851101a4 Interesting. It could be a spoof, but who knows? A buried parachute suggests he lived? In 1980, a family on a picnic found 58-hundred dollars of the loot on a Columbia River beach, near Vancouver. How it got there is another mystery. Some scientists believed the money bag traveled down the Washougal River, which is upstream from the beach, miles from where this parachute was recently found. One quarter of the ransom suggests he died? Perhaps he survived the jump, but succommed to the elements? Have you any more specific idea of the distance between the 'chute find site, and the money beach site? I never had the opportunity to jump the jet at the World Free Fall Convention but friends who did say that the exit from the 727 rear steps into the relative wind is awesome. Even in controlled situations like this the airspeed of the plane is substantially higher than normal jump-run/exit speeds and provides for an unexpected surprise to a jumper who tries it for the first time. My guess is that Cooper (wearing 1971-era equipment and a 25 lb sack of money) became unstable immediately after he stepped out and simply lost the bag. He then likely opened his parachute and began kicking himself in the butt and uttering a variety of expletives all the way to the ground. Speculating further about the recently found gear........Maybe the coyotes, buzzards and sasquatches just don't like nylon! BS, TonyP |
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"muff528" wrote in message
news:_XhGj.3186$N_5.458@trnddc05... Perhaps he survived the jump, but succommed to the elements? .... I never had the opportunity to jump the jet at the World Free Fall Convention but friends who did say that the exit from the 727 rear steps into the relative wind is awesome. Even in controlled situations like this the airspeed of the plane is substantially higher than normal jump-run/exit speeds and provides for an unexpected surprise to a jumper who tries it for the first time. My guess is that Cooper (wearing 1971-era equipment and a 25 lb sack of money) became unstable immediately after he stepped out and simply lost the bag. He then likely opened his parachute and began kicking himself in the butt and uttering a variety of expletives all the way to the ground. Speculating further about the recently found gear........Maybe the coyotes, buzzards and sasquatches just don't like nylon! As well, didn't he jump at something like 15,000 feet? In November, in that area, the temps had to be well below 0F. Also, did he NOT ask for special clothing that would have helped him survive? It was November in the Pacific Northwest, and Cooper was dressed in a normal suit (IIRC). If he did survive the jump, he died shortly after landing of exposure. Quite likely the carnivores had him for dinner. |
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On Tue, 25 Mar 2008 17:13:50 -0700, gatt wrote:
"AMBOY, Wash. - There could be a major break in the biggest crime mystery in Northwest history.The FBI in Seattle is beginning analysis of a long-buried parachute - the same type used by skyjacker D.B. Cooper when he jumped from an Northwest Orient Airlines 727 with a 25 pound money bag containing 200-thousand dollars ransom on Thanksgiving eve 1971." http://www.koin.com/content/news/top...d-b3d4851101a4 A buried parachute suggests he lived? Facts: FBI has had few national cases with such widespread publicity of their failure. The FBI released and reopened (they never close a case so they say) the D. B. Cooper file. Question: Why would the FBI go through the humiliation of another failure/dead end? Suggestion: The have the case solved (or enough disinfo to appear that they have) and "victory" is firmly in grasp. I, for one, trust that the FBI will not falsify evidence, will only discover truth and, in the end, will humbly admit if their, doggone it, best efforts come up empty. YMBestV |
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On Mar 25, 7:13*pm, "gatt" wrote:
"AMBOY, Wash. - There could be a major break in the biggest crime mystery in Northwest history.The FBI in Seattle is beginning analysis of a long-buried parachute - the same type used by skyjacker D.B. Cooper when he jumped from an Northwest Orient Airlines 727 with a 25 pound money bag containing 200-thousand dollars ransom on Thanksgiving eve 1971." http://www.koin.com/content/news/top...content_id=c8c... A buried parachute suggests he lived? Or another attempt at "finding" a "lost treasure" that can be auctioned off on Ebay. A radio program caller mentioned someone named McCoy who pulled the same hijack stunt, got $400k and landed in Provo Utah in 1972. He got busted.... |
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On Tue, 25 Mar 2008 17:13:50 -0700, "gatt"
wrote: A buried parachute suggests he lived? Well, it certainly suggests that some living person buried it. One assumes that they sniffed around for a buried body in the vicinity. Blue skies! -- Dan Ford Claire Chennault and His American Volunteers, 1941-1942 new from HarperCollins www.FlyingTigersBook.com |
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"gatt" wrote in message
... "AMBOY, Wash. - There could be a major break in the biggest crime mystery in Northwest history.The FBI in Seattle is beginning analysis of a long-buried parachute - the same type used by skyjacker D.B. Cooper when he jumped from an Northwest Orient Airlines 727 with a 25 pound money bag containing 200-thousand dollars ransom on Thanksgiving eve 1971." http://www.koin.com/content/news/top...d-b3d4851101a4 A buried parachute suggests he lived? oops false alarm... "The D.B. Cooper parachute was made of nylon, This 1945 parachute was made of silk." http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5j...K3p_QD8VP7IB00 -- Geoff The Sea Hawk at Wow Way d0t Com remove spaces and make the obvious substitutions to reply by mail When immigration is outlawed, only outlaws will immigrate. |
#10
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![]() "Capt. Geoffrey Thorpe" The Sea Hawk At Wow Way D0t C0m wrote in message news:_9SdnVWf7ZCJNW_anZ2dnUVZ_jKdnZ2d@wideopenwest .com... "gatt" wrote in message ... "AMBOY, Wash. - There could be a major break in the biggest crime mystery in Northwest history.The FBI in Seattle is beginning analysis of a long-buried parachute - the same type used by skyjacker D.B. Cooper when he jumped from an Northwest Orient Airlines 727 with a 25 pound money bag containing 200-thousand dollars ransom on Thanksgiving eve 1971." http://www.koin.com/content/news/top...d-b3d4851101a4 A buried parachute suggests he lived? oops false alarm... "The D.B. Cooper parachute was made of nylon, This 1945 parachute was made of silk." http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5j...K3p_QD8VP7IB00 From the article: ---------- "The D.B. Cooper parachute was made of nylon," he said. "This 1945 parachute was made of silk." FBI Agent Robert A. Burroughs in Seattle said Monday that agents had not ruled out the possibility that the chute was from Cooper. "We haven't made a determination one way or the other yet," Burroughs said. "We're still in the process of finishing up what investigative steps we think are necessary to feel certain about calling it one way or the other." The FBI had launched a publicity campaign last fall, hoping to generate new tips to solve the 36-year-old mystery. ----------- Like they haven't got enough to do already? Is someone's budget up for renewal? :~0 |
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