D.B. Cooper's Disappearing ActBy Patrick Mondout
On November 24, 1971, Dan Cooper boarded a Northwest
Orient Airlines flight from Portland to Seattle, demanded and received
a $200,000 ransom, and on the return flight he parachuted into the forest
and has never been seen again. The disappearance of Dan "D.B."
Cooper is one of the great unsolved mysteries of the 20th century.
PIA to Sea-Tac
It was a typically busy Thanksgiving Eve at the Portland International
Airport (PIA) when the man calling himself Dan Cooper walked up to the
Northwest Airlines ticket counter and purchased a one-way ticket on flight
305 to the Seattle-Tacoma (Sea-Tac) airport with a $20 bill. He would soon
be swimming - perhaps even literally - in $20 bills.
Unlikely Skyjacker
Though skyjackings were very common in those days, no one would
have suspected this smartly dressed middle aged man with no discernable
accent. Most of the skyjackings of the previous years, and there were
nearly 150 of them between 1967 and 1972, had been political in nature and
many of the hijackers had demanded to be flown to the Middle East or Cuba.
In an era of anti-establishment riots, hippies, war protests, and movies
like Easy Rider, Cooper simply did it for the money.
Now Departing at Gate 52
At a little past four in the afternoon, Cooper passed most of the other
36 passengers and sat in the back of Capt. William Scott's Boeing
727. He had row 18
to himself as the plane was only a quarter full.
I've Got a Bomb
Shortly before the 4:35 takeoff, he passed a note to stewardess Flo
Schaffner asking for four parachutes, $200,000 in unmarked bills, and
"no funny stuff." The note also mentioned that Cooper had a
bomb. The exact wording of the note is yet another mystery as Mr. Cooper
took it with him.
P.S., I Love You
The stewardess first thought he was passing her a note asking for her
phone number, giving her his number, or otherwise expressing an interest
in her and she simply pocketed it. If she thought there was nothing worse
than getting a picked up by a middle-aged passenger, she was soon to learn
otherwise. She didn't actually read it until they left the ground and
turned off the seatbelt signs.
When a startled Ms. Schaffner finally read the note, she made the
flight crew aware of the situation and they immediately contacted airline
and airport officials.
Schaffner was sent back to row 18 to talk to Cooper and see if she
could tell if he really had a bomb. Cooper briefly opened the briefcase
and the stewardess later recalled she saw some red cylinders and wires.
Everyone took the threat seriously from then on and all future
communications with Cooper were conducted either through notes or orally
but always passed through one of the stewardesses.
You may wonder how he got such a device through the medal detectors. If
so you are forgetting that it was skyjackings like this which led
to the introduction of such equipment in the years to come; his carry-on
bag was never searched.
Four Parachutes?
Law enforcement officials were concerned that the request for four
parachutes might mean either that he had accomplices or that he intended
to take hostages with him. In retrospect, he probably wanted them to be
unsure whether or not an innocent person would be wearing one and thus, to
ensure that none of the parachutes would intentionally fail.
The plane circled above the Seattle airport until a call from the FBI
at 5:24 p.m. indicated they were able to come up with the parachutes and
money. Though the bills were indeed unmarked, the FBI had used the
circling time to use a high-speed copy machine to commit images of all
10,000 $20 bills to microfilm to aid in creating a list of the serial
numbers later.
The plane landed at Sea-Tac at 5:40 and though the plane was now 65
minutes into its 45 minute flight due to the circling, the passengers were
still unaware that they had been hijacked. Cooper allowed them to go and
all but the flight crew and one of the flight attendants left. The pilot
later recalled that the crew could have left as they were all out of the
line of site of Cooper for a time but he was unable to get the attention
of the flight attendant in the first class section without the risk of
Cooper hearing him.
Flight 305 Now Boarding for... Mexico?
The money and parachutes were delivered to the plane and Cooper then
demanded to be flown to Mexico. Knowing that he would be jumping out of
the back of the plane, he also demanded that the pilot, which was actually
co-pilot William Rataczak, fly with landing gear down, flaps set to
15-degrees, to not exceed 170 miles per hour and not to fly above 10,000
feet. The plane was refueled but even with a full load of fuel, the 727
wouldn't be able to make it to Mexico from Seattle with the flaps down
(which made the plane less aerodynamic and thus less efficient) so Cooper
had little choice but to agree to a refueling stop in Reno, Nevada.
The plane departed for Reno at 7:44 p.m. and Cooper soon asked the only
remaining stewardess (Tina Mucklow Larson) how to lower the rear stairs in
the back of the 727. He then ordered the stewardess to close the curtain
in first class behind her and to remain with the rest of the crew in the
cockpit for the remainder of the flight. A final peek before shutting the
curtain revealed a skyjacker attempting to tie something around his waist.
It was the last anyone ever saw of the man called Dan Cooper. In all
likelihood, he was tying the 21-pound bag of money to a tether in hopes it
would land first and give him some indication that the pitch-dark landing
was about to occur.
Your Door is Ajar
At around 8:00 p.m. the pilot noticed a red warning light which
indicated a door was open. If this had happened at 35,000 feet, no one
would have been left alive to notice the blinking red light but Cooper had
wisely requested an altitude of only 10,000 feet. Though the warning light
did not indicate which door had became ajar, the crew correctly deduced
that the aft passenger staircase in the tail section of the plane had been
forced open by the skyjacker.
|
|
Facts
and Figures |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
D.B.
Cooper's FBI Profile |
|
|
|
|
Race: White |
|
|
|
|
Sex: Male |
|
|
|
|
Age: Mid-40s |
|
|
|
|
Height: 5'10'' to 6' |
|
|
|
|
Weight: 170 to 180 |
|
|
|
|
Build: Average to well built |
|
|
|
|
Complexion: Olive, Latin appearance, medium smooth |
|
|
|
|
Hair: Dark brown or black, normal style, parted on
left, combed back, sideburns, low ear level |
|
|
|
|
Eyes: Possibly brown. During latter part of flight
put on dark wrap-around sunglasses with dark rims |
|
|
|
|
Voice: Low, spoke intelligently; no particular
accent, possibly from Midwest section of U.S. |
|
|
|
|
Characteristics: Heavy smoker of Raleigh filter tip
cigarettes |
|
|
|
|
Wearing apparel: Black suit; white shirt; narrow
black tie; black dress suit; black rain-type overcoat or dark top
coat; dark briefcase or attache case; carried paper bag; brown shoes |
|
|
|
|
|
|
"No!"
The alarmed pilot asked over the intercom "Is everything OK back
there? Is there anything we can do for you?" "No!" shouted
Cooper and he was never heard from again. Cooper had chosen his aircraft
carefully. The 727 was the only commercial aircraft with such a staircase
in the back.
Cooper must have been looking for a pre-determined place to jump
because it wasn't until 8:11 p.m. that the plane felt pressure bumps which
investigators have always assumed were the result of Cooper jumping (his
jumping presumably caused the stairwell to snap shut then open again). It
is possible that either he caused the staircase to move violently
to throw off investigators or that it happened inadvertently. If he did not
jump at that time then investigators have been looking in the wrong
place all along.
Send in the Air Force!
The Air Force sent a pair of F-106s from McChord Air Base in pursuit
and they were able to stay within five miles of the aircraft but they did
not see anyone leave the plane. FBI agent Ralph Himmelsbach, who was to
lead the subsequent investigation for nearly a decade, attempted to follow
in a helicopter but was unable to catch up to the plane.
Thank You for Skyjacking Northwest Orient
Still, the FBI did not know that he had jumped for sure until they
searched the plane after it landed in Reno. There was no trace of Cooper
except for two parachutes (one was missing some of the nylon cords -
possibly used by Cooper to secure the money bag to his waist), the remains
of several Raleigh cigarettes (remembered today mostly a nasty smell and
for the coupons included with each pack that could be redeemed for items
much like green stamps), and the tie and tie clip he was wearing when he
boarded.
Did He Make It?
He parachuted from 10,000 feet at 196 miles per hour into the blackness
of the Thanksgiving Eve storm with temperatures outside the plane at at 7
below and the wind chill at a toasty 70 below zero wearing nothing more
than a suit, an overcoat, loafers, and a parachute. At that speed, the
loafers would have been gone almost immediately. However, there is no
reason to suspect that he would be unable to survive 15 seconds of such
temperatures until he landed. If he did die, it most likely would have
been from the parachute failing during the skydive or from not being able
to get out of the snow-filled forest without food or a way of staying
warm.
FBI Finds Not One But Two Bodies!
Did he had survival gear with him? Did he have an accomplice on the
ground to help him escape? The FBI used airplanes, helicopters, and as
many as 300 men to search the area for nearly a month and others are still
searching the area. They actually found bodies, but they were of people
who had been missing for years. Not a trace of Dan Cooper or the money was
found. Until...
Buried Treasure!
On February 10, 1980, a boy named Brian Ingram was digging a fire pit
on the shore of the river northwest of Vancouver, Washington, when he
found $5,800 in thrashed $20 bills. The FBI was soon able to trace the
bills to the skyjacking by serial numbers. Did Cooper lose some of the
money during the jump? Did he plant the money to throw investigators a
bone? If he died during the jump, where is the other $194,200? We may
never know. The boy was given a reward of $2760 including 15 of the
original $20 bills. He reportedly bought a motorcycle and a VCR with the
money.
D.B. Cooper or Dan Cooper?
An unknown law enforcement person leaked to the media that a man named
Daniel B. Cooper of Portland was being sought in connection with the
crime. He was soon cleared but the name D.B. Cooper has stuck even though
the skyjacker only referred to himself as Dan Cooper.
Newsweek Exclusive!
"Kill the front page!" Newsweek almost went to press
in late 1971 with a cover story on D.B. Cooper which contained what they
believed to be an authentic interview with the skyjacker himself. An
editor for the magazine had paid a pair of con artists, one of them posing
as Cooper, $30,000 for what the editor thought was an exclusive interview.
Not to question the intelligence of the editor, but why would Cooper, who
had nearly $650,000 (adjusted for inflation) in ransom money risk coming
forward to collect his share of $30,000? A federal jury quickly found the
two guilty of several counts of fraud. The editor was not formally
charged with stupidity.
Ashes to Ashes
On the morning of May 18, 1980, Mount
St. Helens erupted and covered much of the area with ash and perhaps
permanently covered evidence that would close this case to everyone's
satisfaction.
Copycat
You might think Cooper's cunning plan was original, but you'd be wrong.
Dan Cooper was a copycat. Just two weeks earlier in Montana Paul Cini, who
declared himself a member of the IRA, tried to become a para-jacker on an
Air Canada flight with a gun but was subdued by the crew as he tried to
put on his parachute. Cooper instead relied on the plot of the 1970 movie Airport.
He used the threat of a bomb in a briefcase instead.
He was not the last to "pull a D.B. Cooper." In 1972 alone
three hijackers proved that it was possible to survive the jump from a 727
by parachuting out the back. But they were all either captured or shot
dead or both (fellow para-jacker Richard Floyd McCoy was captured but
escaped and was shot by an FBI agent in 1974). No longer amused, the FAA
required 727s to be retrofitted with a mechanical wedge that
aerodynamically locks the door from the outside while in flight. The
device is nicknamed the "Cooper Vane." Regulations requiring the
scanning of all luggage took effect in 1972 making carrying a bomb on
board that much more difficult (though sadly not impossible).
Would You Like Fries With That?
A young man with a flare for the dramatically stupid tried to copy DB
Cooper's act in 1980 on a flight from Sea-Tac airport to - where else? -
Portland. He wore aviator sunglasses, said he had a bomb in his briefcase,
and demanded $100,000 and two parachutes. The similarities stopped there,
however, as the plane never left the taxiway. After the stewardess slipped
the would-be copycat a couple of Valiums, he let all the passengers go and
reduced his demands to a rental car and three cheeseburgers before giving
himself up.
Our
story is continued on page 2... |