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Help the FBI Find D.B. Cooper

CooperIs your new year's resolution to help solve decades-old crime mysteries?  If so, the FBI is happy to get you started.  They've reopened the case of D.B. Cooper, the hijacker who parachuted from a commercial jetliner with $200,000 in 1971 somewhere over the Pacific Northwest, never to be heard from again.

Cooper's real identity remains uncertain (as does his survival of the jump), but the FBI has released some new details and photos from the case in hopes of crowdsourcing the cold case.

Cooper 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.

Tiemoney

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.

If you've got a creepy relative who's always paying in tattered cash and you'd like to check him out (or if you're Cooper and you've decided you finally want credit for inspiring the development of the Cooper vane), e-mail the FBI to set up a DNA test.

Handcrafted by Flip on January 1, 2008 |

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Comments

Very interesting. The man only got away with $200,000. It is amazing that we have spend more money on the investigation that the crime was worth. There is a whole town in the area the money was found that has a festival every year looking for the samething. This is a great resolution for 2008! We should look to also solve the medical condition of beer nuts and cotton balls.

Posted by: walt | Jan 1, 2008 5:58:23 PM

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