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FBI Dusts Off Famous Case of D.B. Cooper Skyjacking


I WISH THEY WOULD RELEASE THIS FILM ON DVD!!

This is the text of the FBI story. For pictures also, please visit their page:
http://www.fbi.gov/page2/dec07/dbcooper123107.html

D.B. COOPER REDUX
Help Us Solve the Enduring Mystery
12/31/07
Have any information on D.B. Cooper? Then e-mail us at [email protected].

On a cold November night 36 years ago, in the driving wind and rain, somewhere between southern Washington state and just north of Portland, Oregon, a man calling himself Dan Cooper parachuted out of a plane he’d just hijacked clutching a bag filled with $200,000 in stolen cash.

Who was Cooper? Did he survive the jump? And what happened to the loot, only a small part of which has ever surfaced?

It’s a mystery, frankly. We’ve run down thousands of leads and considered all sorts of scenarios. And amateur sleuths have put forward plenty of their own theories. Yet the case remains unsolved.

Would we still like to get our man? Absolutely. And we have reignited the case—thanks to a Seattle case agent named Larry Carr and new technologies like DNA testing.

You can help. We’re providing here, for the first time, a series of pictures and information on the case. Please look it all over carefully to see if it triggers a memory or if you can provide any useful information.

[Left: During the hijacking, Cooper was wearing this black J.C. Penney tie, which he removed before jumping; it later provided us with a DNA sample. Right: Some of the stolen $20 bills found by a young boy in 1980.]

A few things to keep in mind, according to Special Agent Carr:

* Cooper was no expert skydiver. “We originally thought Cooper was an experienced jumper, perhaps even a paratrooper,” says Special Agent Carr. “We concluded after a few years this was simply not true. No experienced parachutist would have jumped in the pitch-black night, in the rain, with a 200-mile-an-hour wind in his face, wearing loafers and a trench coat. It was simply too risky. He also missed that his reserve chute was only for training and had been sewn shut—something a skilled skydiver would have checked.”
* The hijacker had no help on the ground, either. To have utilized an accomplice, Cooper would’ve needed to coordinate closely with the flight crew so he could jump at just the right moment and hit the right drop zone. But Cooper simply said, "Fly to Mexico," and he had no idea where he was when he jumped. There was also no visibility of the ground due to cloud cover at 5,000 feet.
* We have a solid physical description of Cooper. “The two flight attendants who spent the most time with him on the plane were interviewed separately the same night in separate cities and gave nearly identical descriptions,” says Carr. “They both said he was about 5'10" to 6', 170 to 180 pounds, in his mid-40s, with brown eyes. People on the ground who came into contact with him also gave very similar descriptions.”

And what of some of the names pegged as Cooper? None have panned out. Duane Weber, who claimed to be Cooper on his deathbed, was ruled out by DNA testing (we lifted a DNA sample from Cooper’s tie in 2001). Kenneth Christiansen, named in a recent magazine article, didn’t match the physical description and was a skilled paratrooper. Richard McCoy, who died in 1974, also didn’t match the description and was at home the day after the hijacking having Thanksgiving dinner with his family in Utah, an unlikely scenario unless he had help.

[One of the parachutes left behind by Cooper and the canvas bag it came in. Cooper asked for four chutes in all; he jumped with two (including one that was used for instruction and had been sewn shut). He used the cord from one of the remaining parachutes to tie the stolen money bag shut. See a larger version.]

As many agents before him, Carr thinks it highly unlikely that Cooper survived the jump. “Diving into the wilderness without a plan, without the right equipment, in such terrible conditions, he probably never even got his chute open.”

Still, we’d all like to know for sure, and Carr thinks you can help.

“Maybe a hydrologist can use the latest technology to trace the $5,800 in ransom money found in 1980 to where Cooper landed upstream. Or maybe someone just remembers that odd uncle.”

[This map was made to help investigators figure out where Cooper landed. See a larger version.]

If you have any information: please e-mail our Seattle field office at [email protected]. And for more details on the case, see our story of November 24, 2006.

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[deleted]

Jason,

Very good points. Some of the statements by the FBI on this case baffle me, such as: "No experienced parachutist would have jumped in the pitch-black night, in the rain, with a 200-mile-an-hour wind in his face, wearing loafers and a trench coat. It was simply too risky."

I have to agree that just because he apparently took the dummy chute with him doesn't mean that he didn't inspect it. The guy had apparently planned out everything carefully to that point, and I have to believe that he would have naturally been wary of anything that the authorities gave him (chutes, money, bag, etc.).

Too risky? Um, what the heck do you call hijacking a plane and demanding $200,000 ransom? Sometimes it seems like the FBI isn't willing to give the guy enough credit. I read once where the initial investigator actually called Cooper "stupid." While I think we can surmise that the guy was a lot of things, "stupid" is one thing I wouldn't call him.

What's interesting to me is people's bias on this subject based on what they seem to wish to have happened. Many people make the guy out to be a folk hero, so they hope he made it. Conversely, sometimes the FBI agents who discuss the case seem like they want to believe that he didn't make it. Stating conclusively that Cooper could not have been an experienced jumper seems going too far.

By the way, there is a new, fairly recently-deceased suspect in the case whose name has yet to be released (but could be released soon). His physical appearance seems to be a solid match for the descriptions, and he had military training and night parachuting experience. We do know that Cooper, when presented with the parachutes, knew exactly which kind he wanted and immediately chose a military-style parachute - exactly the kind that the newest suspect apparently used during his time in the military.

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just watched a 2 hour movie (half was commericals) on the arrest, conviction, of Richard F. McCoy for the exact same M.O. hijacking a plane only four months after DB Cooper. Check it out. My feeling is he was the same guy as DB Cooper.

the fbi even asked the guy but he wouldn't admit... not surprisingly.

same type of plane hijacked.... only four months after cooper.
same method of conducting himself inside the plane.
reallllllly interesting.

i think the recent move by fbi to open the case is simply to cover all bases. apparently, many people within the police community already believe it was McCoy.

McCoy escaped from prison and was killed by police.. so no further interviews were possible. he had been sent to prison for hijacking and collecting $500,000 in ransom.

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It wasn't McCoy.

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Some retired FBI people says it was.

Others who say McCoy wasn't Cooper say that because witness descriptions don't match him... but eye witnesses are notoriously inaccurate. And apparently there were only two who were believed.

So, that said, why do you say it wasn't him? Do you have an inside knowledge of the FBI case file? If not, you are merely basing your opinion on information in the public sphere..... which doesn't have ALL the data the actual investigative file does.

But, I am interested in your idea.

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I don't have inside knowledge. I have common knowledge. Too many things about McCoy have to be stretched or changed in order for it to have been him. Like the fact that he didn't smoke (this in particular is one thing that pro-McCoy people can't explain. The best they come up with is that he used fake cigarettes), was sloppy and left one of the notes with his handwriting on the plane, changed into a jumpsuit and helmet before going on his jump, was picked up by a hitch-hiker while wearing the jumpsuit, pulled off his jump right next to his own backyard in Utah. He almost assuredly was having dinner with his family the very next day (a pretty convincing although admittedly not safeproof alibi). He had blue eyes instead of brown (brown and hazel eyes are easy to get mixed up, green and blue eyes are easy to get mixed up, brown eyes and blue eyes are not easy to get mixed up). McCoy's fingerprints do not match any of those found on Cooper's 727, McCoy bragged and talked a lot like an idiot about his hijacking (which helped lead to his arrest), whereas if Cooper is alive, he has been very, very good at staying quiet. McCoy was also 28 years old at the time, whereas Cooper was described as someone 15-20 years older. McCoy must've had a pretty deceptive disguise - with fake cigarettes and all - if he had been Cooper. Flight attendant Florence Schaffner basically has said that McCoy wasn't Cooper, and her own composite that she came up with looks nothing like him. Eye witness reports can be inaccurate, but usually in cases where witnesses only catch a glimpse of someone, like a thief, briefly, not when they're in the same relatively small space with them for over an hour on end. Furthermore, McCoy was also much more precise in his flight and navigation instructions than Cooper was.

If you want my opinion, McCoy had the technical knowledge of flight, navigation, and skydiving as well as the physical skill to pull off the same basic crime. But he wasn't as smart when it came to getting away with it.

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Where is the chute? Surely this huge piece of very visible white nylon would be seen somewhere, especially from the air. I think he buried it, or maybe folded it up as small as he could get it, placed a heavy rock within it, and threw it in a lake.

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Now we might know the answer to this....

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Oh man, so much hubris and all-knowing displayed by the FBI. They downplay the case and whitewash their piss-poor investigations by proclaiming such arrogance with

“Diving into the wilderness without a plan, without the right equipment, in such terrible conditions, he probably never even got his chute open.”

and

"No experienced parachutist would have jumped in the pitch-black night, in the rain, with a 200-mile-an-hour wind in his face, wearing loafers and a trench coat. It was simply too risky."

As if time wasn't taken into consideration. They also presume that he didn't have "the right equipment". It is apocryphal and refuted, but no one has disproved an additional carry-on where he may have supplied such materials.

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Skydiving from a Boeing 727 is not only possible, but has become quite popular (if not entirely affordable) precisely because of D.B. Cooper. The scene which opens this 1981 film wasn't CGI.

http://www.mfk-projects.com/skydiving.htm

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