D.B COOPER HIJACKING MYSTERY CASE

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"D.B. Cooper" Cold Case Team
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D. B. Cooper is a media epithet used to refer to an unidentified man who hijacked a Boeing 727 aircraft in United States airspace between Portland, Oregon, and Seattle, Washington, on the afternoon of November 24, 1971.[1][2] He extorted $200,000 in ransom (equivalent to $1,278,000 in 2020) and parachuted to an uncertain fate over southwestern Washington. The man purchased his airline ticket using the alias Dan Cooper but, because of a news miscommunication, became known in popular lore as D. B. Cooper.

The FBI maintained an active investigation for 45 years after the hijacking. Despite a case file that grew to over 60 volumes over that period,[3] no definitive conclusions were reached regarding Cooper's true identity or fate. The crime remains the only unsolved air piracy in commercial aviation history.

Numerous theories of widely varying plausibility have been proposed over the years by investigators, reporters, and amateur enthusiasts.[4][7] $5,880 of the ransom was found along the banks of the Columbia River in 1980, which triggered renewed interest but ultimately only deepened the mystery. The great majority of the ransom remains unrecovered.

The FBI officially suspended active investigation of the case in July 2016, but the agency continues to request that any physical evidence that might emerge related to the parachutes or the ransom money be submitted for analysis.
 

New D.B. Cooper suspect revealed through lab analysis of skyjacker’s tie, just in time for CooperCon​

This much you can say about Eric Ulis: he doesn’t give up.

The true-crime investigator, who organizes the annual CooperCon in Vancouver, believed for years that a man named Sheridan Peterson was the celebrated skyjacker D.B. Cooper. He told The Oregonian/OregonLive in 2019 he was “98 percent” certain Peterson was the pseudonymous criminal who’s inspired songs, countless books and even a feature film.

But unlike many other dedicated “Cooperites” trying to bust open the only unsolved airline hijacking in U.S. history, Ulis is willing to reevaluate his assumptions when the evidence doesn’t quite line up.

He abandoned the late Peterson as a suspect about a year ago when he couldn’t find anyone in the former smokejumper’s long life who knew him to puff on cigarettes. The skyjacker, who bought a $20 plane ticket at Portland International Airport on Nov. 24, 1971, under the name Dan Cooper -- and later jumped out of Northwest Orient Flight 305 with $200,000 in ransom – smoked cigarette after cigarette while onboard the Boeing 727 that day.

But while Ulis gave up on Peterson, he didn’t give up on the Cooper case.

Eric Ulis
Eric Ulis was featured in History Channel's "The Final Hunt for D.B. Cooper." (History Channel)
On Friday at 10 a.m., less than a week before his annual D.B. Cooper convention gets underway on Nov. 17, Ulis will hold a press conference at Vancouver’s Kiggins Theatre to talk about “a compelling new person of interest.”

Once again, Ulis believes he may have solved the case.

After walking away from Sheridan Peterson, he rededicated himself to detective work, this time zeroing in on the evidence from a 2017 scientific examination of the tie worn by the well-dressed skyjacker and left behind on the plane.


The lab analysis found a variety of metals on the tie – most notably a unique and rare titanium alloy that Ulis’ research indicates was produced by only one company: Crucible Steel – formerly Rem-Cru Titanium.

Ulis contacted the company, now known as Crucible Industries, tracked down former employees still alive who worked there in the 1960s and ‘70s, and traveled to Pittsburgh, where Crucible Steel was located. This led Ulis to the man he now believes was probably D.B. Cooper, the late Vince Petersen – yes, the same last name, with the exception of one letter, as his previous favorite suspect.

“I’m satisfied D.B. Cooper came from this company,” Ulis told The Oregonian/OregonLive this week.

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D.B. Cooper
True-crime investigator Eric Ulis says the late Crucible Steel researcher Vince Petersen, shown here at right in the 1990s, could be the man who hijacked Northwest Orient Flight 305 in 1971. (Photo courtesy of Eric Ulis)
Ulis, 56, has dug into Vince Petersen’s life and work, finding what could be connections to the skyjacking. He’s also searched the voluminous FBI case files that have been made public and found nothing about a Pittsburgh suspect (most names in the files have been redacted), suggesting he’s covering entirely new ground here.


The possible motive for Petersen to hold a plane full of passengers hostage for money: In 1971, the steel industry was beset by labor strife and economic upheaval, with some 47,000 steelworkers in Western Pennsylvania alone “officially laid off or temporarily idled,” The New York Times reported at the time, though Ulis hasn’t been able to determine if Petersen himself faced a pink slip in the months before the famous skyjacking.

Petersen worked in Crucible’s Pittsburgh-based titanium research laboratory. He died in 2002 at 83.

The skyjacker known as D.B. Cooper became a folk hero in the 1970s, an audacious criminal who stuck it to The Man without hurting anyone -- and got away. (Many people chose to believe he successfully escaped. The late FBI agent Ralph Himmelsbach, who led the bureau’s investigation for a decade, believed Cooper most likely died somewhere in the Northwest woods on the night of the crime.)

Decades later, thanks to social media and the FBI’s decision to finally abandon the case, public fascination with D.B. Cooper returned. The past few years have seen amateur and professional sleuths investigate every lead, documentary filmmakers and authors take up the subject, and new “confessions” pop up.


Ulis is one of the best known of this second wave of Cooper chasers, featured on the History Channel’s “History’s Greatest Mysteries” and the Discovery Channel’s “Expedition Unknown,” as well as appearing in the Netflix documentary, “D.B. Cooper: Where Are You?!”

He admits he likes being in front of a camera, but he says ultimately his work is about closing this half-century-old case.

Has he really done that by pulling a new name out of the conspiracy-theory-stuffed D.B. Cooper haystack? He’s not willing to say he’s quite as certain about Vince Petersen as he once was about Sheridan Peterson.

Ulis notes that he’s talked to Vince Petersen’s son, and that the son doesn’t believe his dad was the famous skyjacker. “As far as he knew, his father was an honest person,” Ulis said.

Petersen’s son also said he wasn’t aware of his father having any experience with skydiving, Ulis added.

But Ulis is completely convinced he’s onto something with Crucible Steel, prompting him to go public.

“I consider it a substantive break in the case,” he said. “Unless someone can explain how these (titanium) particles got on this tie.”
 
The only thing I can say is while $200,000 was a load of money in the 70s, if this man lived for many years it wouldn't have lasted long at all in later years. Someone pulling something so big likely planned to live a "good" life with no stress about money or need of a job. But how long would that have lasted really? Five years? Ten? Then what did he do? Buy a home even back then and/or live high off the hog for a year or two and most of it is gone right there.
 
The only thing I can say is while $200,000 was a load of money in the 70s, if this man lived for many years it wouldn't have lasted long at all in later years. Someone pulling something so big likely planned to live a "good" life with no stress about money or need of a job. But how long would that have lasted really? Five years? Ten? Then what did he do? Buy a home even back then and/or live high off the hog for a year or two and most of it is gone right there.
And to top it off, a lot of the money was found on the ground in streams. I don’t know all the details - it might’ve been other places too. I have a hard time believing Cooper lived through the whole thing.
 
Interesting article about the hijacker DB Cooper. I have often heard about it but never knew the exact details. This article describes what happened.

 
Interesting article about the hijacker DB Cooper. I have often heard about it but never knew the exact details. This article describes what happened.

The subject, The conspiracies, Have been beaten to death. Even potential suspects. This has nothing to do with you posting the article. Thank you. I'm surprised I haven't heard it was J.F.K. And he wasn't really killed.
 
Interesting article about the hijacker DB Cooper. I have often heard about it but never knew the exact details. This article describes what happened.

Yeah. I was a year, 5 months and two weeks old.:LOL:
 
It has been beaten to death and every time I read of it, it is a bit unbelievable to me and I think it's half b.s. And more is known. Even though it seems quite mysterious and like some smart hijacker/thief like it say at the end of the article above, he is no hero, he is a crook, etc.

It seems all so mysterious, etc. but I'm not sure at the same time that I buy the half of it. I also fail to see why the agency would ever close the case.

He'd be in his 90s if he did survive and if he did, I'd have to say he got away with it. If all true as told and written to begin with.

But I agree with the one guy, he isn't any hero.

He does not deserve any mystique even IF all true.

I don't like cases where they never find the body but of course it happens, plenty. In this one though it is downright strange as is finding money after the fact.

Also pretty weird they mixed up one Cooper with another.

Just plain odd.
 

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