In 1971, An Enigmatic Man Boarded A Plane. 45 Years Later, The Mystery Is Still Unsolved.

It was a chilly November day when a man calling himself Dan Cooper boarded Flight 305 to Seattle. Cooper behaved just like any other passenger. He was handsome, well-dressed, smoked a cigarette. and ordered a bourbon and soda.

The plane, a Boeing 727-100, was to be in the air for about 30 minutes before making its scheduled landing.

Image Source

Shortly after takeoff, the man passed a note to one of the flight attendants, saying that he had a bomb in his briefcase. (The exact wording of the note is unknown, as Cooper later reclaimed it.)

Image Source

Flight attendants and members of the crew (pictured above) who spoke with Cooper described him as easygoing, confident, and courteous.

Image Source

In a polite and friendly tone, Cooper demanded $200,000 and several parachutes. He ordered the plane to land at the Seattle airport, where the plane would refuel while the money and parachutes were brought to him.

While the plane was on the ground in Seattle, Cooper asked that it be taxied to a secluded area and the lighting inside the cabin be turned off, in order to obstruct any snipers. Cooper released the passangers and some of the crew, and authorities handed over the money and parachutes. Cooper then ordered the plane back up in the air with the rear door open and the staircase extended.

Image Source

Shortly before the plane passed over the Washington-Oregon boarder, Cooper shut the whole crew in the cockpit. Alone in the aircraft’s cabin, Cooper climbed down the stairs at the back of the plane and parachuted out into the dark night.

Image Source

The crew was able to land safely and no injuries were reported during the hijacking. But where did Cooper go? This is still anybody’s guess. He has never made himself known and no one has ever figured it out. He literally disappeared without trace.

But a few clues have surfaced over the years. In the fall of 1978, a manual was found that explains how to open the rear passenger stairs of a Boeing 727. The book was later shown to have come from the plane Cooper hijacked. In 1981, an 8-year-old boy found a few packs of ransom cash in the Columbia River that was stacked in the same order as when it was given to Cooper.

Image Source

More than 1,000 suspects were questioned over the years before the FBI closed the unsolved case in July 2016. The official theory is that Cooper died during a parachute jump.

Many people believe that the case was solved in the mid-90s when a man named Duane Weber told his wife that he was actually the mysterious hijacker Dan Cooper. It was unlikely that Cooper would disclose its identity after all these years, but when the FBI looked at Duane Weber and compared him with DB Cooper’s identity, they had lumps in their throats. Duane and Cooper were strikingly similar.

Image Source

The FBI thought perhaps that they had caught their man, for there was much to his story that sounded true. But with the help of DNA, they later proved that Duane Weber was not D.B. Cooper.

Theories as to what actually happened to the “Robin Hood” of the sky are many. But the fact remains: “D.B.” Cooper has never been seen since 1971.

What do you think happened to the mysterious Dan “D.B.” Cooper? Let us know in the comments below! And don’t forget to share this fascinating story with your friends!

Published by Newsner, please like

 

Exit mobile version