The FBI could've solved the DB Cooper mystery very easily…
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元才 — 1 week ago(March 21, 2026 06:06 AM)
It's a good guess, but remember - people weren't as stupid then as they are now
He would have to have taken that flight before, known the alternate routes and had back-up plans in place for changes.
I'm all for that being possible -
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WarrenPeace — 1 week ago(March 21, 2026 02:44 AM)
I think it's cool when criminals get away with it.
I saw a thing on TV where there were a few different family members and friends saying this or that guy they know was DB.
"Please vote to preserve the unique character of Warren…" - Robert Duvall -
ZolotoyRetriever — 1 week ago(March 21, 2026 03:52 AM)
I'm strongly leaning in that direction myself. Although no parachute or dead body was ever found, it's entirely possible his chute malfunctioned or something else went wrong in the jump, and he perished in a spot that somehow eluded human detection in the subsequent search of the area. None of the ransom money ever turned up in circulation either. In 1980, about $6,000 of the ransom money was found buried on a sand bar along the Columbia River near Vancouver, Washington, but my hunch is that this is money he gave to one or more of the flight crew before he jumped - sort of as a "thank you for helping me" gratuity. Said flight crew member(s) decided later to just bury the money and be done with it. (It was buried "naked" too - no protective bag or wrapping was around it. DB Cooper would not have done that with his precious loot that he risked his life for. So, I think it was a disposal operation.)
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ZolotoyRetriever — 1 week ago(March 21, 2026 06:31 AM)
Not as loony as it sounds. It was noted that DB actually offered one of the stewardesses one of the packets of $20 bills ($2,000) in the money ransom bag. She claimed she turned it down. I have this suspicion that DB left the crew a little part of the ransom money as a gratuity for cooperating with him during the hijacking. The FBI did not search the crew or their personal belongings after the flight had landed in Reno. So it's entirely possible that some of the ransom money did end up in their hands, but later they decided to bury it and be done with it. Again, pure speculation, but it's worth pointing out that one of the stewardesses on the flight lived in the general area near the Columbia River where that money was buried. (And no, it wasn't the whole $200,000 ransom, just a small portion of it.)
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ZolotoyRetriever — 1 week ago(March 21, 2026 06:50 AM)
Well, the buried money I'm talking about is the money found buried in the sand on that sand bar along the Columbia River in 1980. It was three packets of $20 bills, totaling around $6,000, all identified (by serial numbers) as being part of the $200,000 ransom money given to DB Cooper. A bunch of studies have determined that the bills found in the sand were not simply washed ashore - they had to have been buried most likely by human effort. Since the packets were buried without any sort of protective wrapping or in a bag, my assumption is that somebody was just burying it to get rid of them. (The money had already significantly degraded over just a few years, and without a protective covering or bag, it eventually would've rotted away.)
Schrodinger's Cat walks into a bar, and doesn't. 
