Scandi,
I may be wrong on that one. Left may be able to answer that. It doesn't really matter though, dial a direct line or ask for an individual by name. The result is the same. Either way he intended to contact H-bach and no one else.
OD
The exact quote is "He (Ted) insisted on talking to me". Which brings up some good points.
First, the timing of the call. Almost 1 1/2 hours after Cooper jumped.
Second, why couldn't he relay his "information" to another agent. Maybe because he knew the other agent would get suspicious,
Third, he knew if he feds started looking at him, with the armed robbery conviction, living next to the airport, losing his job, being broke, etc., they would have starting zeroing in.
Fourth, he was dying to know if the feds suspected him, exactly what type of description the girls gave of him, and if the feds still thought he was on the plane
Fifth, if the feds were on to him, he could have simply hopped into his plane, with the money, and skipped town
sixth, he had to know where the feds thought he jumped, so, that he could hide the money in a place where they wouldn't be searching.
on and on.'
That is why you are taught as a police officer, FBI agent, etc, to suspect everyone, and never, ever, release information to anybody, especially a convicted armed robber,who should have been the number one suspect.
Think about it logically. What information did Ted give to H-bach that night that was so important that he "had" to talk personally to Ralph, and nobody else? Answer, absolutely none. Not only did Ted not help, but he stared the investigator into thinking there was no way Cooper could know where he was when he jumped, which Ted even admits today is total b.s. He told us, a simple stopwatch will do.
Plus, Why is Ted lying, and telling us the FBI called him four times that night, and that he "doesnt' know H-bach? Never heard of him.
Plus, I asked Mayfield, I said we have Cooper, should we turn him in? Mayfield says "no, I wouldn't, somebody might try to hurt him".
lol
left