Hi left, I still haven't been able to see the segments, but your posts brought up some more questions for me. I hope you will indulge me in answering them.
1 If he got away with it once, why do you think didn't he do it again in a different state to divert attention?
2 Didn't Cooper jump out of the plane on a night when it was raining pretty good?
3 Were parachutes back then made so you could direct your decent like the ones we have today? (I've never been so I don't know the right terminology)
Ok but is that now, or back in 1971? Wouldn't they know exactly when he jumped? By the time into flight and/or wouldn't their be some record of when the plane lost cabin pressure? I thought that's what the black boxes were for...
Thanks!
Hey Seeker
The new show is now on KOIN's website.
HE didn't do again in a different states for a variety of reasons. One, he had close to 1,000,000 dollars in todays money.
And, skydivers dive in areas in which they are familar. He would have been unable to pull off this dive without assitance in other states. For example, how would he have gotten to another airport? who would have picked him up? how would he determine his dropzone? and he would have huge unexplained absenses away from Portland. Plus, he didn't know any FBI agents from other cities.
After the Cooper heist, the Feds were staking out airports, looking for the next Cooper. The heat was on.
2) He did jump at night, and it was rainy and a bit windy. However, it was in squalls. Typical for ORegon. It will rain hard, stop, and start. Not a huge problem for skydivers. Especially one with over 5,000 jumps. Look at the photos of the airplane while it was on the ground in Seattle. The ground was wet, but it was not raining at all.
that type of night is the only night you could pull this off. Do it in the summer, and everyone will be searching for you instantly, not to mention it stays bright until 10pm here in the summer.
3) Back in 1971, there were steerable parachutes. HE was a "rigger", and made and packed parachutes. personally, I think he brought his own chute onboard that night.
THe feds do know the exact time he jumped, 8:13pm,. due to the change in air pressure in the cabin. Exactly where on v-23 the plane was is not certain, nor does anyone know if he dropped straight down, or steered for a while to his car, or away from the flight pattern.
IF he died, he would have been found the next day, right underneath the plane's flight pattern. No doubt about it.
left
PS By the way, the cabin was not pressurized when it left Seattle. Cooper specified they fly below at or below 10,000 feet, and not to pressurize the cabin.