Chilluminati Podcast - Episode 278 - D.B. Cooper
Episode Date: December 15, 2024Alex tackles D.B. Cooper this week with Mike and Jesse. A classic mystery with a wide range of possibilities.... MERCH - http://www.theyetee.com/collections/chilluminati Zocdoc - http://www.zocdoc.com.../chill Miracle Made - http://www.trymiracle.com/chill Promo Code: Chill HelloFresh - http://www.hellofresh.com/freechill HeroForge - http://www.heroforge.com All you lovely people at Patreon! HTTP://PATREON.COM/CHILLUMINATIPOD Jesse Cox - http://www.youtube.com/jessecox Alex Faciane - http://www.youtube.com/user/superbeardbros Editor - DeanCutty http://www.twitter.com/deancutty Show art by - https://twitter.com/JetpackBraggin http://www.instagram.com/studio_melectro
Transcript
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Hello everybody and welcome back to the Chiluminati Podcast episode 278. As always
I'm one of your hosts Mike Martin joined today by the three amigos of LA Jesse
Alex and special guest Norm. Of many things but Alex usually has something written
so I don't want to like jump into any interruptions to the guest.
Hello my friends welcome to yet another installment of our say it with me star studded
Chaluminati
non-denominational wintergasm as math has said
I'm the host today that hard-working guy everybody loves to trigger
But also asks to order their wine for them at restaurants Alex posse ony
Joining us on the show today is an old professional acquaintance of mine whom over the years
I've become extremely lucky to call my friend. His high quality YouTube content, The Gaming Historian, has
set the tone for documentaries about video game history for 15 years. He's a
huge unabashed fan of the author, content creator, and toy historian Pixel Dan
Erdly, and these days when he's not getting lost in the extended Tank's World
Universe online, he co-hosts a hilariously inappropriate history podcast
with his wife and longtime collaborator, Kristin Caruso, an old timey podcast, which started
rocking earlier this year, a couple months ago. And if I had to describe it, I'd say
it's a podcast for intellectuals who make fart jokes. Norman Caruso, welcome to the
show.
Thank you for that very classy introduction. I appreciate it, Alex. I must stress for you, Mr. Fosciani breaks out the big introductions for friends. You can tell when he likes someone versus like, it's a guy.
Because when he likes someone, it's like the most elaborate, beautiful intro. And anyone else is like, yeah, this is a dude.
When I write the episode, there's's gonna be a good intro in it
That's all it is. I'm here. I'm a rat contour
I know how to I know how to frame context, you know norm comes on the show
I could just say yeah
I've been going to conventions with this guy for fucking ten years and I know him pretty well because we eat at Cheddar's a lot
You know, yeah, but that's not tight. Yeah, that's not tight
The audience might appreciate that authenticity even more actually. Yeah, it's it's there's a respect there like an earned intro like, you know
Alex can I tell a fun story from a convention?
We were to clear my favorite my favorite memory of conventions is when we went to Norway
And we wanted to try I think it's called snooze.
Oh my god. Oh, we have to put it like in your mouth, like under your tongue, or whatever?
Kind of like dip. It's like a mix between a tea bag and dip. Yeah.
That's a great way to describe it. And so we went down to this convenience store and we asked the
clerk, we want to try snooze. Like, can you give us something easy? And he was like, he's like,
yes. And he was like, this is what all the teenage girls use. And it was like, it was like a menthol snooze. And we were
like, great. And we were, we took it and we walked back to the hotel and we both were like, oh, I
don't feel so good. It was like literally like struggling. Is it a food? What is it? No, it's
like tobacco. It's like, oh, yeah. It's like you put it in under your lip and then it like goes in your bloodstream.
Oh, like kind of feels like you smoked a cigarette, but like never smoked one.
So, yeah, it is.
It was like that was the accidental blunt at your house.
Yeah. It also felt like it was six p.m.
and it was like 1245 a.m.
like, yes, it was a fucked up.
We just like met like David Wise for the first time in our lives or something. Yep. Like two seconds. I don't know what the vibe is currently overseas,
but there was a time period, I would say 2012, 2013, 2015, we'll say up until COVID started
ravaging the world. Um, every convention I went to overseas, everyone I met from Norway or Sweden was rocking the
snooze. They were like, you want some of this? Like, no, I don't. I don't know what that
is. And last time you guys gave me stuff, it was like weird extra, uh, like salty licorice.
And you guys were like, here, eat this. It's delicious. I'm like, no, it's not. I flew
too close to the sun. We we had whale I think the same trip
I don't know if that was the same trip, but there was we did try whale. Yeah, it was it was it was responsibly
Sustained farm raised whale it was we didn't we didn't go out and harpoon a live whale, but like yeah
It's it tasted like steak and smelled like fish. Yeah, it was kind of weird
so it's Norway's an interesting place is the
Get away and they're hard people like that was the teenage girl brand snooze like that
Or like no it was just
Yeah, imagine no one can see and if you can see yo my camera was working just fine until about two seconds ago
No, what's going on?
I'm being watched by the CIA. It's fine. But like it's this big. They're little pouches. Oh, okay
I thought that was like you just pinched like how much you wanted. It's a little sachet. Let's call it
Yeah, and then you stick it like Alex had tea bags the perfect way to describe it. Oh, yeah
You didn't say that you tea bag it in your mouth as one does. As one does. Yeah, and then you,
I guess, are like, yeah, nicotine. But you know, don't put don't put tobacco in your mouth, kids.
There's a lesson to be learned there. Even if you are a teenage girl, you know, and you are strong
enough to handle snooze, you know, take, take five. Not me.
I'm not even, I won't even attempt it.
But if they smoked the amount of weed that you smoke, they would also have similar problems.
I bet they do, my dude.
I'm going to let you know a secret.
I feel like Norway's doing just fine in that department.
Is weed legal in Norway?
I imagine it is.
I feel like nobody's going to bother you no matter what because everywhere in Norway is
just like a beautiful city.
It is like paradise. It's natural.
Gorgeous. Yeah, absolutely insane.
So, so, Norm, one thing we always start off by doing here on the show
when we have a guest is explain to them that the reason that we think
Chaluminati works is because Jesse is like the all the time skeptic guy.
No, I'm not. Like so that's like one energy. Right.
Math is why I know the drone thing is weird
when Jesse's even like, someone's weird about this. Mathis is like the true believer guy. Right. And
I'm like high or something. I don't know, but it's the perfect trifecta of hosts for a show like ours.
And so we just have to ask, like, if you had to pick one of us that you are, when it comes to this
type of stuff that we do on this show, like, where do you think you land on the spectrum?
To be honest, I'm probably more of a Jesse kinda guy.
They always are, baby.
Hello, come on, join the crowd.
As I was gonna say, every story I've ever heard
starts with, I'm more of a Jesse, but.
I saw a goblin in my grandma's house.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I jumped straight into Goblin, not even a ghost.
Yeah, yeah.
So, yeah, I mean, I kind of expected that.
You're a very rationally-minded guy.
Your energy in this world is very, I would say,
down to earth and rational.
You're a funny guy, but even your content that you make
is very much the factiest facts.
Yeah, I mean, me trying the snus in Norway
was really outside of my comfort zone. I really went out there doing it
Most positioning himself as like his podcast is intellectual
Intellectualism with fart jokes. It's like the yin to our yang. We're like pretend intellectualism
Intellectualism sprinkled on top. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah, you know what that works really well
You know how I know we're not intellectual is because we absolutely think we are
We're like oh
This shows a metaphor a masterpiece, but
Well, okay, well then let me be even more cheeky then the other thing that we like to ask is if you are anyone in your
like
friend circle your family if you've ever had anything in your
like, friend circle, your family. If you've ever had anything in your life that you have seen that you can't explain, or like,
I have this one famous family dinner where like all my relatives, like, admitted that
they saw ghosts at the same time, or Pat came on last time, Pat Contrary, our mutual friend.
He told me that he always felt he was a little bit psychic and often predicted small disasters
before they occurred.
So whatever, whatever. Yeah. Sounds like something Pat would say. Absolutely.
Is that true? Did I black out for that? That was a while ago. That was in the dreams. That
was in the dreams episode. I remember the dreams and I remember all the Pat episodes.
I don't remember Pat being like, I predict the future through the power. I don't remember
that. He says a lot of different things sometimes stuff sneaks right through well, okay?
this is this is interesting you're asking me this because I
Did grow up in a house that was like kind of a famous haunted house in my small town
I love that that aspect of this
Okay, so tell tell me whatever you're comfortable telling me okay?
So I thought you'd be like, no, nothing happened.
It just everybody thought it was haunted.
Okay, well, so I'll start from the beginning.
It's it was a house that was built in like the 1880s.
And it was originally built for the guy that invented Vicks Vapo rub.
That's amazing.
Okay.
Yeah, it was going to be like I've ever heard of my life.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And it was going to be like his summer home the most American thing I've ever heard in my life. Yeah.
Yeah.
And it was going to be like his summer home.
But he never lived in it.
And then at the turn of the century, this family from New York moved into it.
And the story goes that she fell in love with a local man.
One of the daughters fell in love with a local man and they dated for a while, they broke
up and then the night they broke up, she was
seen crying on the porch, and then she was never seen again.
And they found her body in the river like 30 days later.
That's like a Red Dead Redemption, like environmental storytelling side quest right there.
Yeah.
So it was this like big mystery about who killed her because the guy they at first thought killed her boyfriend,
he was acquitted and then he ended up killing himself. What? Yeah, it's a wild story. I don't
want to go too much into the weeds, but basically the house has always been known to be haunted by
her spirit. And my mom and dad decided, I guess, when I was a kid, hey, we want to live in this
haunted house. Great.
And so we moved in.
I personally never really experienced anything
that crazy living there.
Occasionally, like, I would wonder,
hmm, I'm pretty sure I turned that light off,
but it was on.
Oh.
You know, mundane stuff that, you know,
sometimes I guess ghosts do mundane stuff like that,
like change the thermostat or
unlock the door or something like that. My brother, though, said he, my brother said he experienced
like wild stuff. Like he- Where does your brother fall on the uh, Chiluminati spectrum, by the way?
Oh, uh, Mathis for sure. Yeah, yeah. You need one of me in your life at all times.
He, so I remember one night he woke up like screaming, sweating, and like we all rushed
into his room and he was like, she was at my window. She like floated through the window
and like descended onto my bed and like put her hand on me. And he was just like screaming, like he thought it was real.
So that's what my brother went through.
I never experienced anything like that, but.
Pretty good though.
Like I like the entire Vicks VapoRub, like Baron,
like that's a good element.
Vicks actual home.
And this is crazy because this is only a sample size
of people who've come to be a guest
on the Chilluminati podcast.
But like I have not yet been let down by just asking like, is there like a crazy ghost story in your family?
Like that's that's a that is an amazingly textured, unique ghost story.
That's pretty good. You know, I like that.
Yeah. Yeah, it's it's it was it was fun.
I honestly living in that house like made me appreciate old houses and stuff.
So it was cool living there.
And it was always cool to like,
I made a lot of friends by being like,
yeah, I live in the haunted house.
And everyone was like, whoa,
can we come over and check it out?
You know, but.
I would have been, that would have been me.
I would have forced myself into friendship with you
and been like, can I sleep over tonight and tomorrow
and the next day and the next day?
So can I sleep naked? Can I next day. Can I sleep naked?
Can I sleep naked?
I'll beg for the ghost.
I would be like really creepy about it.
Like I would be the friend that you would not want
to have around as a friend is what I'm saying.
So I also briefly mentioned that you and your wife,
Kristen have a hilarious history podcast together.
Last I listened to it was like a couple days ago.
It was like three episodes deep into like the true
Pocahontas story, which is like-
Pocahontas, yeah. is like Pocahontas.
Yeah, just just like somebody just getting mixed up in a world beyond their understanding
and getting chewed up and you know, just an interesting crazy story of like, I don't know,
really, really interesting character Pocahontas. So she didn't learn the name of the wind and
like befriend that shit before she left. But uh, point in point, you're not going to believe this, but the Disney Pocahontas
film, I think they made some stuff up.
There was some stuff that movie, you know, that raccoon is canonical to the story and
more importantly, talked in real life.
Miko, that raccoon.
Yeah.
Yeah.
He talked to real life, not in the movie.
Uh, not in the movie, but in real life.
Yeah, which I was mad about. They silenced him.
They cut it. They cut it because there's too many characters.
This is the censorship we're talking about.
Yes, exactly.
Anyway, the episodes were interesting as shit.
Shows called an old timey podcast. I like it because it's funny.
I also like to like fake hang out with my friends by listening to their things.
Sometimes as a creator, maybe we can.
Does that count as a parasocial relationship? I think it's like, I think it's like, like quasi
Paris. Yeah. And then like, see, like you guys just like really seem to like care about the stuff that
you're talking about, which is like always fun. But I thought I would ask, like, have you ever in
your travels as a history buff, encountered something that you are like, yeah, this is actually,
unexplained. This is like one of the weirdest things that I've ever heard of in my life in history.
Like, is there like, Jesse did an episode recently, not that recently, but like fairly
recently about this red man that like Napoleon like went into a castle and supposedly did
a deal with.
And by all accounts, it's true.
Is there anything like that, like a myth or something that's just part of the historical record that you don't that
you that you that sticks out to you like the missing people of Roanoke's another good one
when people ever just kind of like, oh, that's it.
Thank you, Mathis.
That's a great example.
Yeah.
The Lost Colony of Roanoke, which I talked about in my Pocahontas series where there's
we just have no idea what happened to those the colonists.
Do you think they were absorbed?
That's what we were talking about when we did episode like Jesse did an episode
on Roanoke long as time four years ago. Yeah.
We were talking about they got absorbed,
absorbed, absorbed into the local tribes or the local tribe. That's right.
That's right. Yeah. My, my best guess is yeah, that's probably what happened.
They were either sold as slaves into the local tribes or they were just assimilated into the local tribes in the area.
That's gotta be the wildest, the wildest thing.
There was a recent study I read and boy, this is gonna be crazy because I cannot give credit. It was like a couple weeks ago and I do not remember.
But it was along the lines of they were doing research into native ancestry. And there was one tribe that was like,
everyone in it had a certain percentage of German blood. And they were like, Oh, a long time ago,
someone must have like ingratiated themselves with these people. But like, we don't know when
that was. And I really think that's interesting too, that we probably the more tests you do of
people from around the world, you discover weird things like, oh no, something happened here and we just don't know what that is. I think it's very interesting.
Yeah. It's funny how the little pieces of information that you take away from things like
the less that you know about something, the infinite possibilities start to make it seem really
interesting, which is kind of, you know, true of the topic that we're going to be getting into today,
which I'm going to just take the reins and dive into right now.
If you don't mind.
Yeah. And honestly, this topic is is another great example of anomaly in history.
We're just like, we have no idea. We don't know.
No one has any fucking idea. And it's.
And it's something just come out about what we're about to talk about.
Absolutely. And yeah, I promise I will touch on it briefly in this story.
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But anyway, Norm, this is probably going to be news to you, but though this is only the
first part of our thrice-yearly or so new
DB Cooper mini-series that we're doing, it also happens to be the final step in a meta-sequence
of eight seemingly unrelated episodes that nevertheless were all this time related, building
up to an absolutely huge reveal today, at the end of this episode. And if you don't know exactly
what I mean when I say it's going to be a literal festival
of exciting little mysteries like you've come to love
and expect from your three fuzzy little
enigmatic ear boyfriends,
think of who I, or do I?
I don't wanna be an ear boyfriend.
Some people are into that.
Anyway.
I wanna be an ear paramour.
Look.
A pair-ear-mor, if you will.
A peer-a-mor.
Anyway, Norm, the reason I addressed you at the beginning of the previous
paragraph was that I wanted to give you proper context before I go over the sequence in full
for the very last time. The very last time.
Please do, because I'm very intrigued.
I just want to time out really quick. Norm, please open your mind, open your heart,
and embrace what Alex is about to tell you.
And then when he is done, please, if you could just try to explain to us what you think it
is Alex just said, I would love to know.
I would love to know what you think.
As I've said before, as I've said before, there is a through line to all these subjects
that I've chosen for these eight episodes.
So after we do this right now, I will actually officially ask you guys
what you think the thread connecting them all is
at the end of this.
And Norm, if you have a guess after hearing them,
I'll feel free to chime in as well.
And at the end of the episode,
I'll tell all you guys if you're right,
and I'll reveal what new type of episode
I'll be revealing next time.
The very next episode is the reveal
with the return of another beloved
and completely expected
special guest.
Anyway, also, hold on, time out.
I want to change my order here.
Norm, whenever you get lost, will you please just raise your hand?
Great.
Okay.
I'm actually going to get an index card out with a pen so I can keep track of this.
Anyway, each episode had a word attached to it
that began with the letter H,
starting with the word hidden,
which was connected to the crazy UFO yelling episode
with Mathis and Santel and me,
in a world without Jesse,
where I actually began to believe half of all UFO news
was just a psyop to prove the truth.
That's the issue with putting yourselves,
even if I leave it a minute,
putting yourself in Santel's orbit.
There is a whole lot that man I love him to death
just thinks is true.
Then the next word was heavyweights,
which was a clue that the episode was going to be about
WWE related mysteries and murders,
which are double hard to believe because everyone
thinks wrestling is completely fake.
Then came horse, which was a clever reference to the big scary blue horse out in front of
the Denver airport, which isn't an Illuminati genocide bunker after all, no matter how much
they pretend it is.
Beautiful statue.
Yeah, really, really, really severe.
I would say.
Yeah, it is like, really severe, I would say. Yeah, it is intense. I'm like a horse.
It's intense.
After that was Head, which is where dreams happen, right, in your head, and where we
talked about Pat Contri's dream journal, which he kept without me asking, by the way,
and about that This Man hoax ever dreamed this man, thisman.org, that inspired the movie
with Nicolas Cage, as well as a way weirder Japanese horror movie that was way closer to the source material, at least as far as the eyebrows were concerned.
After that was Hello, which is what the Zodiac would say when he introduced himself, though a
lot of people were pretending to be the Zodiac, so who knows what he said really. Next comes Huge,
which was a reference to our second episode about the often faked,
never proven Bigsfeet species, but nobody caught that it was also a reference to a 2010 TV show
that our guest for that episode, Jacob Wysocki, was on for an entire season with Nikki Blonsky
on ABC Family. So how about that? Last week was Him Again, where we found out why special agent
George Hickey ended up suing George Donahue for libel,
for saying he accidentally shot JFK in the head while covering him during the shooting
with an AR-15 from the car following behind the president. He says Donahue made it all up himself.
I think it's one of the better theories I've heard. And then lastly, today,
one of the only notorious criminals in modern American history, who's mostly viewed as a hero until very recently.
And the hero clue turned out to be about the great
D.B. Cooper all this time.
So there is the full H8 sequence
and hidden within it is a clue, H8,
to what the very next episode is about.
So real quick, take one second and under 10 seconds, tell me what you think the next episode of the show is next episode is about. So real quick, take one second, an under 10 seconds,
tell me what you think the next episode of the show
is going to be about.
I'm tired.
Well, H8 would spell out hate.
Yeah, that's true.
So that's all I got.
It's like a clever thing you put on a license plate.
Yeah, it's like a chief Wiggum-esque deduction.
Excellent, yes. I don't know.
Okay, what do you guys think?
You guys have been hanging around for this whole thing.
What do you guys think?
Eight episodes?
It's been over a year.
The more you talk about it, the less I understand.
Oh yeah, I've never been more confused in my entire life.
They're not body part related in some way?
Body part related?
What do you think, Jesse?
Big toes, JFK's head gets blown off?
Okay, I saw the act is that is the next thing gonna have an H in front of it. Maybe
Maybe we'll find out at the end. I honestly don't know where your I don't know what we're gonna do
All right. All right. All right. All right. I have no clue
All right. All right. All right. All right. I have no clue. I can't help at all with this. Yes. What is the running theme
between each one? What is like? We'll get there. We'll get there
today. Don't worry. Talking about back to DB Cooper. Like JFK,
there's lots of completely different, fully conflicting ideas about what
happened to DB Cooper and who exactly he was. And also like JFK, each one of them
is supported with tons of convincing and well co-operated and palat he was. And also like JFK, each one of them is supported with tons of convincing and well corroborated
empirical evidence.
Well corroborated empirical evidence,
which is why if you didn't catch it before,
I'm saying that while today's episode
is a great standalone story,
you'll be very satisfied by the end of this episode,
it's also the beginning of a sequel series to JFK,
at least in shape and form, all about the
true identity of the unknown subject popularly known as DB Cooper. Right? So today, before
diving into the deep lore of any one suspect, we're going to be doing it just like we did with JFK,
where I start by covering the basics of what happened on the day, on a timeline, why people
still care. So you can find out why people still care about D.B. Cooper now in 2024.
What's so amazing about this case and exactly what it is.
That's so intriguing about the only unsolved case of air piracy
in American history.
You're like, hang on.
Haven't you talked about D.B.
Cooper before?
Yes.
In a mini-sode only long time ago.
We never actually did a full episode on this guy.
Yeah.
And then, you know, in a few months,
depending on what happens with some extremely recent new
developments in the case,
there'll be another part to the story
that hopefully is able to look at the first
of several very convincing suspects
before it's finally just solved by doing a DNA test
or whatever on an old parachute.
Though, as you'll see at the end of the episode today,
I'm not really sure exactly how worried I need to be.
This episode was written with a heavy debt to the book
D.B. Cooper and Flight 305 by Robert H. Edwards,
PhD. It's over there. I'm not going to grab it, but it's a nice red hardcover book. He's very
shrewd sort of focus on in researching this case. I found it really admirable. It's very data-based,
not to mention extremely rigorous, detailed, filled with primary sources, very specific,
accurate data across many unrelated fields of study
and expertise. So please, if you can, if you enjoyed this, purchase a nice beautiful copy of
this book. There's no ebook version of it, you got to buy a physical version of it. It's really,
really amazing. This man did much of the hard work here, not me that made it possible to write up
this episode. And the book is so much more than just the skeleton of a story I'm telling. The book
does tell you the story of the hijacking itself,
which I'm going to do augmented
by some outside sources, of course.
But to me, the true value of reading it
is all the extra analysis I didn't put in here
that fleshes out.
A lot of the areas you probably have tons of questions about
by the end of the story today.
Plus, the pages are really glossy,
so they're really nice to touch.
And I know that because I've touched them very much.
Also, I use like
Wikipedia, lots of primary sources from the FBI were used to verify things from the book
that I was inferring from the way that he wrote them. But anything beyond Edwards book
that I like quote ideas from, I'm going to mention it by name as I go. For example, here
is a quote from the beginning of the first episode of the extremely famous true crime
podcast serial for Jesse to read
by writer and presenter Sarah Koenig.
I just want to point out something I never really thought about before I started working
on this story.
And that is, it's really hard to account for your time in a detailed way.
I mean, how'd you get to work last Wednesday, for instance, drive, walk, bike?
Was it raining?
Are you sure? Did you
go to any stores that day? If so, what did you buy? Who did you talk to? The entire day
name every person you talk to. It's hard. Now imagine you have to account for a day
that happened six weeks back because that's the situation in the story I'm working on and which a bunch of teenagers had to recall a day six weeks earlier and it was 1999. So they had to do it without
the benefit of texts or Facebook or Instagram.
Yeah. So now that you have that, and obviously this is that, that podcast is about a, a guy
who's probably wrongfully accused sitting in prison, um, trying to get acquitted. And
I don't even remember what happened. That's a great dude yeah do we are we a bad podcast like that's
very good yeah that was like really well I was like I want to know more yeah so
now think about the last time you think she would an eight eight eight parter with four parts for three and no well ask ask ask yourself why they're more successful ask yourself this is serial a meta textual masterpiece like the Chiluminati podcast a meta fictional meta
first off no of course not no obviously not.
Yeah textual masterpieces only recognized after the artists are no Alex will have to be dead for a hundred two hundred years
Yeah, then I'll be I'll be like the M's Emily Dickinson of podcast
When they make the illuminati movie starring whatever the
2035 version or 2335 version of yeah, like I don't know like a clone of Philip Seymour Hoffman. Yeah
All right.
So think about the last time you were on a plane, right?
How long ago was that?
What do you remember about being on the plane?
I don't know about you.
For me, it's always the small details on a plane because I'm like hyper focused because
I'm in like a tunnel.
The shape of the tray table latch, the smell of the weird spicy pickles.
I can't see that somebody's eating somewhere behind me.
The angry way I have to sit when I'm in coach because I'm too tall
to fit comfortably in the chair, right? So when it comes to people, I'm extremely
specific based on very little information, right? I'll see a stewardess
with neat nails and I'll say, oh she probably has a Nintendo Switch in her
bag or I'll see this weird all blonde all sandals family with the backpacks and
the orange t-shirts and I'll think they're probably Dutch. I don't know why.
It just occurs to me. The sandals. It's the sandals. We need to test. We need to put
the this this intuition to a test. My point is that you don't. The point is that it's bad intuition.
The point. My point is that it's dumb intuition. Do you know that though? Your brain just like does
a little thought process. You're like, oh, this guy's like an old Chinese grandpa. And you're like,
you have no idea if that guy's like even a grandpa,
right? The old man with one too many open buttons, right? Drives around on his giant
rich people compound in a golf cart and his pool boys named Hidalgo, right? You just give
everybody a story without thinking about it. You're just like, yeah, look at this guy.
So that's kind of the point of this, right? That's easier to do than just to actually
remember things, right? So DB Cooper is not only a man on a plane, right?
He's one of the most notorious myths in American culture.
Everybody can picture his ass.
Everybody can see the picture of that weird rat face
dude with the glasses on and the little mod suit on, right?
Yeah, the composite sketch, right?
Yep, the composite sketch.
And I just also want to point out, too, America,
I don't know if it's uniquely American,
but it's certainly big in America. We have a
fascination with like Robin Hood esque criminals like even Billy the Kid back then like there's this fascination with these vigilante
criminals who are like putting it to the man and all this other stuff and just like America just loves
I don't know. There's no modern evidence for that. I didn't mean
just loves. I don't know. There's no modern evidence for that. I didn't mean to do a D.B. Cooper episode. There's no modern evidence for that. That sounds far-fetched to me. I didn't mean
that. I did not mean to do that, but it is pretty interesting. No, but you had this episode planned
well before the modern stuff happened. Pretty interesting that there's like a guy right now
that everybody's like, it's cool what he did. We like what he did. But yeah, it's kind of why.
How many people did the CEO murder? But that's just what I did. We like what he did. But yeah, it's kind of why. Yeah, because how many people did the CEO murder?
But that's just what I'm saying is like,
DB Cooper kind of fits that same kind of mold
where everybody's like, what a, what a like.
That's why, not to talk about the monster,
it's just why it's weird to watch the media
be like surprised that the public is like,
yeah, go fuck yourself.
Like, yeah, this is what America has fed in entertainment,
in like what we've loved forever, of course.
Yeah, always the little guy beats the big guy
who's in control, right?
And also, D.B. Cooper is not from last Wednesday,
like they were trying to remember in the serial.
He's from over 50 years ago, right?
So it's really hard not to make up your own version
of the D.B. Cooper story,
add your own politics to the D.B. Cooper story,
whatever you wanna do. So for
today, as Robert Edwards does in his book, and like the FBI have
done on occasion, we too will be referring to this figure
throughout the episode not as DB Cooper, because that implies
too much stuff 50 years down the line. But as the unknown subject
or the unsub, we're gonna call him the unsub to try and diffuse
some of that legendary status when picturing him as we move from the timeline today.
And I'm going only off stuff that I can actually prove occurred based on multiple sources,
right?
So there are key parts of this that you might expect to hear about that are not in here.
So just get ready for that.
And oh, well, I just realized this copy of my notes, which I definitely completely right by myself and
aren't sent to me from some faceless entity. Always. Always
always. Also just somehow weirdly included a note from
some guy who calls himself Phil you monotony. Anyway, I'll
probably just have math is read this one. Yeah, yeah, no
problem. Greetings, Initiate Alex.
Thank you for allowing yourself to have written the first entry in the D.P.
Cooper miniseries for you.
We realize that time is a factor in your higher calling and everything we can do
to help mitigate that we will do as a token of good faith.
We have manipulated a podcaster, you know, into an appearance on your show today
to serve as a life model decoy for the real DB Cooper, who we believe he looks and sounds
exactly like.
He will be employed as such throughout our paying him.
Trust us.
His regular speaking voice sounds identical to the real DB Cooper presented as funny.
Do not be alarmed if you thought it was your own idea to invite him on.
In fact, it was.
Good luck with your mission.
It is very important to you.
Weird, okay, well I probably shouldn't have read that
on the air now that I think about it,
but that doesn't matter.
I didn't really understand it anyway.
Probably intended for somebody else,
but anyway, first things first, just to test it out,
who wants to hear Norm show us exactly
what it would sound like if our own unknown subject
did an ad for this show?
Here you go, Norm, just go ahead
and we're just gonna make sure our reading our reading mechanism is working here.
patreon.com slash Chaluminati pod.
Great. Anyway, DB Cooper American Air Pirate begins right now. Also apologies, names from
mid-century America are their own type of hard to pronounce melange of European last
names. So forgive me as I try my very best with some of these people. The date is November 24th, 1971.
It is 2 o'clock p.m. at the Portland International Airport.
The unsub approaches Dennis Lisny at the Northwest Orient Airline Sales Desk and asks for a
one-way ticket to Seattle on the flight that leaves at 2.45 p.m.
Flight 305, which again leaves in just 45 minutes and is set to arrive at Seattle Tacoma International Airport, aka SeaTac, just 36 minutes later at 321 p.m.
So this is a quick flight. I've done this flight before, Portland to Seattle. It's a quickie. According to Lisne, the unsub is nervous, but the interaction was normal, nothing particularly weird or suspicious about it. He thinks he remembers him paying with his right hand, but he's not sure.
Nobody's sure what hands the unsub uses.
He seems to be ambidextrous.
The unsub pays $20 cash for the ticket, gives the name quote, Cooper, Dan Cooper as the
name of the passenger.
According to the book, while everyone else quoted in this story definitely saw the same
man, and even some like our man
Lisne here had some significant time and like FaceTime directly with him to look at him,
all the witnesses' names appear on the manifest, but somehow DB Cooper's does not.
There is not a Dan Cooper on the passenger manifest for this airplane, strangely, even
though we're very sure that the same man who bought the ticket was the same man on the
plane.
Also, the ticket that we've all seen, which I'll send you a picture of now to look at, does not include a seat number,
which is kind of interesting.
But I guess things were just loosey goosey as shit back then.
So there you go.
That's DB Cooper's plane ticket, which is number one zero one
two one four four four zero six seven seven three zero.
Check it out there.
That's from his website.
Also, coincidentally, there is. That's from the FDIS website. Um, also coincidentally, there
is a Michael Cooper on the flight, but he is not DB Cooper, or at least there is no
one out there who thinks that Michael Cooper from that flight is DB Cooper. Anyway, uh,
the unsub also had no check baggage for sure. Uh, but Lisney isn't sure if there was a carry
on. Uh, like I say, he was pretty unremarkable, so nobody specifically remembers him boarding
the plane, but another witness, the copilot, First Officer Bill Ratajek, remembers it was
raining that afternoon, which is funny considering the quote from Serial.
From their time with him that day, even though things were moving pretty fast and most people
involved probably had a lot on their minds, witnesses do remember, albeit vaguely, what
the unsub looked like somewhat in slightly conflicting
accounts. Six people said he was a white guy like a Caucasian
American guy. But one of them, our pal Lisney, the sales desk
also added he seemed to be quote, of Latin descent. And one of
the passengers, a man called Robert B. Gregory said he was
quote, Caucasian, believed to be of Mexican-American descent
or possibly some American Indian blood,
which is weirdly specific.
And it is weird that when people mention blood
that like when they're talking about somebody else's race,
it like makes my muscles tense.
Yeah.
It's a little unnerving.
Yeah, it feels like eugenic-y.
I don't know why I don't like it.
Anyway, he's also remembered to be between 5'10 and 6'1,
medium size, slim, clean shaven with, quote,
olive skin and, quote, dark or swarthy features.
And that his hair was wavy, dark,
and combed close to the scalp with left part.
And also with a, quote, marcelled,
greasy patent leather sheen slightly receding in front.
Alex, I have a question. And I can't remember if you mentioned this. Do you back then, did
you have to show your ID when you bought a ticket at the airport?
Literally you did not. Like literally, he didn't. He just said what his name was. And
they were like, sure. For a long time, we used to be able to just like disappear in
America without having like a second thought.
You can just vanish.
It's literally so crazy because like if you think about the bus, right, there's no question that you're going to like you don't show your ID to buy a bus ticket.
Right. Like maybe today you do.
I don't know. But if you're paying with a credit card or something, but like the the notion of the plane.
Right. Like if you think about what a plane is, it's like a bus, right? And it goes from like one thing to the next, like next stop, stop, stop.
And then you get off and it's exactly like a bus. And that's how we were thinking about it. You
smoked on the bus, you do whatever the hell you want to do. And then you get off the bus. There
was no security factor, you know, and I was saying, you know, JFK like was interesting because it was
such a important case because it changed the world in a lot of ways, right?
But this didn't, even though it's just as vexing to people,
even though people have been studying DB Cooper
just as much as JFK, and there's so much literature
out there around it, the only major effect
that DB Cooper had on like culture at large
was that like right after DB Cooper happened,
a bunch of other people tried to be DB Cooper got caught and then they were like
All right. Fuck you
We need to do metal detectors
Yeah on the fucking thing and if you're gonna buy a ticket on the day with cash you need to show your fucking ID
So there's got to get criminals. Yeah, exactly. So especially one where you just get away with money. Yeah people here
Yeah, a lot of money. Yeah
Fair like he only asked for I think it's like $200,000. We'll talk about it in a minute, but today,
I know for sure that today the amount
would translate to one and a half million dollars,
which is a lot.
Doesn't seem like a lot today though.
Yeah, you could almost buy a house with it.
Exactly.
In Los Angeles.
That's what DB Cooper wanted.
He just wanted to buy a nice condo in Portland.
He just wanted to retire, yeah.
He knew he was gonna have to pay three million dollars eventually, so he wanted to get a nice condo in Portland. And that's what he did. He just wanted to retire, yeah. He knew he was gonna have to pay
three million dollars eventually,
so he wanted to get started on his futures.
Okay, also all the witnesses seem to agree loosely
that he was middle-aged, somewhere between 35 and 50.
Though I will say, in the 70s, due to numerous factors,
everyone seemed slightly older looking for their age
than they do now.
Like, I always talk about this, but if you ever go look at the actor who played the Beatles manager
in Hard Day's Night and realized that he was 38 years old when they shot that, he looks like he's
about 64. It's a weird thing. Even if you go back to the 1800s, kids back then, literal like 10 year
olds who were working minds basically looked like they were 30 year olds. It's wild. I don't know
what that footage is, but there's this
famous footage of like somebody riding like with a camera on the
back of a trolley or something like on a streetcar and there's
like little boys following him that are like mugging for the
camera, but they're like smoking cigarettes and they have like,
they you know, they have like knives and shit. They're no
joke.
Like what else? I mean, what else are you gonna do back then? Yeah, it's absolutely insane. But,
you know, I don't know, just the quality of life has improved
tremendously. Yeah, the oldness of people has just changed our
perception. Like, I am 36 years old, but I don't look at even
though I think by modern standards, I do. I think that if
I went back then and I said, I'm 36 years old, people wouldn't
wouldn't buy it as much
For example another passenger William Mitchell
described a quote sagging chin on this person but clarified that what he meant was that
Wasn't that he had a double chin like a fat person
But rather a loose flap of skin under his neck that he called a quote turkey gobble
loose flap of skin under his neck that he called a quote turkey gobble.
And two of the stewardesses told FBI sketch artist Roy Rose
that he had quote sort of a protruding lower lip.
So I don't know what this guy looked like, but he kind of, I feel like he had like a bird like old, like Don Knotts kind of look to him.
But like maybe like Mexican Don Knotts.
Like an underbite? Yeah, I guess. Protruding lower lip.
Oh, lamby, I'm just a little still applying.
He was said to be wearing some kind of dark menswear
top layer item, like a suit or a trench coat
or a blazer or a jacket or a raincoat,
all of which different witnesses referred to it as.
So the idea of him wearing like a stylish black suit,
not real.
He was wearing probably
like a brown suit with like something over it, maybe. Whatever it was, it maybe had a
vest underneath it, nobody knows for sure. He had a white shirt on or maybe like a light
shirt, you couldn't really see it that well the way he was wearing it. He had a dark necktie,
almost certainly black for a reason I'll tell you in a minute. Brown shoes, he didn't have
a hat on, he didn't have gloves on, he didn't have jewelry or accessories besides one very
average normal looking cheap dark colored briefcase. Weirdly though, other
than the things that I just mentioned, people didn't really have much to say
about his face or his voice other than that he looked normal and average and
that he spoke accentless American
English spoke very clearly. He's very calm, right? That's that's like the impression like nothing
memorable about the way he talked or how he looked, which is so funny to me.
But other than this, the Northwest Oriental sales agent, Liz, and he said that he got quote,
an overall impression of a laboring type man as opposed to an office
worker, which the book I read speculates at possibly being him maybe sensing that all
the clothes were just as cheap and throw away as the briefcase like maybe he just bought
everything to wear for this one thing.
But it's just from the one guy.
So I don't know.
Also, for a moment, let's address the sunglasses situation.
I don't think that there was any moment at all,
and this is the T, I don't think there's any moment at all
where DB Cooper wore sunglasses at any point, zero.
So you're telling me the Loki TV series
when they did their version of it is lying to me?
Do you mean like was Loki DB Cooper, is that what you're
asking?
Yeah, because he was wearing sunglasses in that one
when he jumped out of the plane.
Yeah, I know.
No, it was not Loki.
Loki was wrong.
I read a lot of sources connected to this case.
I haven't found a single instance of somebody saying
he had them on anywhere in actual testimony.
Some people say that some of the flight attendants
remembered him wearing glasses at some point.
I don't know where that is.
I wonder when the sunglasses entered the mythos.
Well, if I had to guess, it's probably something like
the profilers, the FBI profilers,
always draw people in sunglasses when they're fugitives
because it's a very common way to hide your identity.
So there's like, oh, if you look at any picture,
and there was like a Bing Crosby version of the sketch
that was like the A version of the sketch that everybody
thought was dumb. But then they then they sort of redid it to look like the one that
you all know of when you're thinking of Zodiac. And when they put them next to each other,
even if you remember the Zodiac one, same thing. One of them he's wearing glasses just
because he would if he was trying to hide his identity. So I think people just got caught
up in the mystique of DB Cooper being like a debonair James Bond plane jumping guy. And then like, just was like,
of course he wears cool glasses and a black suit and just kind of like, went that way.
But my point is, maybe he wore them, maybe he didn't, plenty of people certainly believe he
did out there. But in looking at this case myself, I made the conscious decision to exclude
the mention of sunglasses. And I will even go so far as to say I think maybe you
Should consider doing so yourself when talking about DB Cooper
Anyway, according to one of the flight attendants whose name was Florence Schaffner of the 36 passengers on the Boeing
727 that day he was second to last to board of all of them and And he sat himself in the last of 18 rows
in the middle seat of an empty section.
Like it was a D-E-F in the back row
and he took seat E, right?
The middle seat.
Though Robert Gregory,
the guy who was talking about his Indian blood earlier
or whatever, said that he also saw him scoot over
to the window seat at some point,
but it doesn't really matter.
They're basically touching.
Though probably in the sixties,
they were like full on chairs with like breathing room
and elbow room next to you probably like lazy boys yeah
probably felt fucking great to fly you could just hang out chat probably
actually was nice and convenient anyway he's back there a bunch of people have
memories of him being there for sure we know he was there and now that all the
passengers are boarded Florence the stewardess we just met starts serving
refreshments before the plane even starts taxing down the runway. So the unsub is in 18 E. He's literally her first customer,
which she especially remembers because he ordered a bourbon and seven up,
which if you don't know what a seven up is, um, you'll see the show.
It's like a sugary lemon lime soda, like a Sprite or a starry seven up,
not exist anymore. It's just a bourbon and seven up is a weird vibe.
Yeah, that's a weird combo for sure.
It's not unheard of.
It has a name.
I forget what it is,
but it's just like people remember shit like that
because it kind of is distracting in a way,
but also like maybe it's just a tell of where he's from.
Like maybe there's some area, you know,
like how people always say Canada,
they love the bloody Caesar, right?
So you can like,
if somebody orders a bloody Caesar in Los Angeles,
you're going to imagine,
oh, that's probably like a Canadian person or somebody who spent some time in Canada.
So some some attention has been paid to the odd bourbon 7-Up order, but who knows?
Apparently, it's called a 7-in-7. Yeah, that's true. Remember the drink? I've heard that. Yeah,
I've heard that. Like a C, but that's specifically Seagrams, right? Yes. Yeah. Like this bourbon and
7-ups just a weird drink. Like if you can imagine what
that would taste like, it's probably weird. But it's kind
of like a whiskey sour though, also. So I don't know. The
drinks 125 he pays with another $20 bill that he had. He
apologizes for not having smaller bills when asked.
Florence says that's okay. She'll bring him change in a
little bit once a few more people buy their drinks. And she
heads off. Then a little while later, apparently he
spills this drink according to William Mitchell. And he talks
to a stewardess about it, who gives him a form to fill out.
Though nobody else remembers this or at least mentions it's
in their accounts, it might be somebody misremembering the
thing that happens very next. It's takeoff time, Florence
checks all the passengers seat belts are fastened before
taking a seat herself in the galley which is just behind seat 18E and a little bit to his
left. And just like that we're off to the races though he'd probably already been
running his own secret race alone for a while now. There's no way this could have
went off this clean without that without some practice. A lot of people think he
probably flew this route several times in prep for this. One minute later, before the plane had even left
the ground 18 E hands Florence a plain white envelope. She
doesn't open it because the plane is taking off and she
thinks that this weirdo is probably trying to like, be
like, do you like me? Yeah, circle. Yeah. So she's like,
I'll deal with that in a second. But he's like, she's sitting in
the chair and he keeps like, looking at her from like where he's sitting
He keeps like turning looking at her and being like kind of like, you know open that, you know, like kind of looking waiting for it
So she fucking opens it and though there's multiple accounts of the exact wording
We'll have norm here read out my favorite version of what the note said for us miss
I have a bomb here and I would like you to sit by me.
Yeah. So the worst thing to get ever.
Yeah. So Florence reads that she's in like a surreal state.
She does a double take on the note. She reads it again, looks up at 18E, asks him if he's kidding.
And then I'll have Norm read out what he said back to her in a quote, serious but calm manner.
No, miss, this is for real.
This is actually how I got my last date. I said, excuse me, miss. I've got an explosive package in my
pants and she's like, are you, is this serious? I said, no miss, this is for real.
This is for real. And then you were like, then then then then then then then.
At this point, uh, from the app jump seat, another flight attendant din, din, din, din, din, din, din. All right. At this point, from the aft jump seat,
another flight attendant doesn't know it yet,
but she's about to get mixed up in a whole big situation,
starting to write the F now.
Her name is Tina Muklo, and she looks over
just as Florence gets up to sit next to the man in 18E.
And she immediately notices the vibes are off.
Tina is the C stewardess,
Florence is the, I believe the head stewardess.
So she's seeing her head stewardess like, kind of like, give some like,
unconfident vibes. It's not a good thing. She looks over at Florence, Florence mouths her name like,
fucking hell. And though they can't agree on whether Florence handed her the note,
or she picked it up off the ground after Florence dropped it. Tina also ends up reading the note
and head straight towards the phone behind them both near
the galley in the rear of the plane to try and intercom with the flight deck
up front in the cockpit. So nevertheless, the plane lifts off at 2 58 p.m. and the
flight crew who do not yet know about Florence and Tina's situation at the
rear of the plane send a teletype confirming liftoff and projecting a landing time of 3.36pm.
It's a little later than they said, but that's okay.
It's all part of the program.
Back in row 18, Schaeffer asks again, are you joking around?
Are you kidding?
Here's Norm with what he said.
No miss, take this down.
And then he reaches over to his briefcase, pulls it into his lap, shows Florence something
which she is well enough convinced to be a homemade bomb, and here's Jesse with a quote from
the book describing what the bomb looked like.
The briefcase was described by witnesses as cheap looking and black or dark brown and
measuring about 12 to 18 inches.
The contents of the briefcase were a bundle of six or eight reddish colored sticks with
no labels or inscriptions, each
about six or eight inches long. Possibly taped together, two or more wires attached to the
bundle with red insulation and the cylindrical object about eight inches long and two and
a half inches in diameter with terminals resembling those of a battery.
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So we don't know whether this was a real bomb.
We have no idea because it's not something that's been recovered.
But it was enough for this dude to like get everything popping on this plane.
So that's the best we got.
She gets out a paper and a pen from her purse.
Here's Norm with the note that he dictated to her.
I want $200,000 by 5pm in cash. Put it in a knapsack. I want two back parachutes and two
front parachutes. When we land, I want a fuel truck ready to refuel. No funny stuff or I'll do the job.
No fuss. He said no fuss because she seemed worried when he said that he would blow up the
plane but she wrote it down anyway because she thought it was part of the note. So he just like
the note says no fuss at the end even though he didn't mean to say that
it didn't mean for her to write it, which is a weird detail. He asked for two
parachutes to discourage sabotage because it implies he'll have a hostage.
So they can't like make one of the parachutes not work and then he just
dies because he's gonna have a hostage with him. So then she's all done writing and says okay and then he says a little more,
which Norm will read right now, a little more ominous language from the fucking DB Cooper guy on sub.
After this we'll take a little trip. She offers to take the note to the cockpit, he says go ahead,
so she gets up to do it, runs into Tina in the back of the plane who's already on the intercom with the cockpit, grabs the first note from her, heads
to the cockpit. Tina looks down, asks 18E if she wants him to stay there. And here's
Norm with what he said. Yes. Great. So even though Florence is just headed up front with
the note, our friend, the co-pilot, Bill Ratajcek, has already been talking to Tina for a while,
who first
signaled something was wrong with the pre-arranged signal of bells at a time that was most likely
about one minute after takeoff, then picks up the phone herself and says this, which
Jesse will read for you now.
We're being hijacked.
He's got a bomb.
And this is no joke.
This is exactly, exactly what I hope will happen when he read that.
So shortly after that, Florence shows up with the notes, hands them to the pilot, Captain
William Scott, who tells her not to leave the cockpit again.
She doesn't.
We don't hear any more testimony from Florence ever again.
So back in row 18, Tina has now taken Florence's seat and she's like lit the dude's cigarette.
She's like, hey, we're all your homie.
We're going to cooperate.
Don't even worry about it.
He shows her the bomb as well, tells her it has a remote detonator. She's like, hey, we're all your homie, we're going to cooperate, don't even worry about it.
He shows her the bomb as well, tells her it has a remote detonator.
He says, listen, the crew better not use the radio too much because I don't know if any
of the signals from the radio is going to blow up the bomb.
I don't think it will, but be careful, keep it to a minimum.
You know, he's just, he's being scary.
She calls the flight deck again, tells him about the bomb and stuff.
And then from now on, she becomes kind of like his trusted go
between, like a little gopher person that he uses to do
things for the rest of your deal. And then just a little
while later at 313pm, the flight crew sends this message to
Northwest Oriental operations, which Mathis will read for us
now, by the way, Northwest Oriental is just the name of an
airline that's still around, I'm sorry that the word Oriental
is in there. I have no intention besides just saying the name
of this company when I say it.
That's dude, nothing will beat the 18 fucking
60s news article we read, so you're fine.
Oh my, I can't even imagine.
There was an English muffin brand at my diner
called Power White English Muffins.
You're like never, I don't want that.
Yeah, I'm good.
Here we go.
Passenger advises he is hijacking us en route to Seattle.
Stewittus has been handed note requesting 200,000
and knapsack by 5 p.m. at Seattle this afternoon.
Wants two backpack parachutes.
Wants money and negotiable American currency.
Denomination of bills not important.
Has bomb and briefcase and will use it
if anything is done to block his request.
En route to Seattle.
Yeah. So this sets off a crazy chain of messages back and forth. They decide they're going to enter
a holding pattern over Seattle in the airplane until the demands can be fulfilled. They're
trying to just like, I think the parachutes come from like a flight school and some other place.
They're just getting whatever they can. They arrange the money situation. So they're just like
literally flying in the air over the airport.
And meanwhile, Tina's just like chatting with this guy.
The passengers have no idea they're being hijacked.
She's trying to fill dead air, keep it light.
She asks where he's from.
She asks if they're going to Cuba.
He's like laughing at her because of course
he's not gonna say where he's from
and of course they're not going to Cuba.
And then he tells her she's going to like
where they're going, which is fun. And then he gives her one of his cigarettes, even though she quit,
and gets her to tell him that she's from Pennsylvania, but that she moved to Minnesota.
And he calls Minnesota he goes, Oh, nice country, which some consider interesting,
like as a turn of phrase for an American, but I don't really I feel like plenty of people refer
to areas as country in America.
Yeah, it's time for the land, not the yeah, Minnesota, nice
country, good trees, right? Like when you're when you're
primed to look for conspiracy, you're going to interpret that
as something else. Yeah, I know. It feels very American to me. I
don't know. I think I think you're right. Meanwhile, they're
slowly building a picture of this guy for the people on the
ground.
Here's Mathis with another message to Northwest Oriental from the flight crew.
Name of man unknown, about six, one high, black hair, age about 50,
weight 175 pounds, bordered at Portland.
Yeah, Tina Muklo asks him why he chose Northwest Oriental Airlines
and he gives a badass response, which Norm will read for us now.
I think it's pretty cool. It's not because I have a grudge against your airlines.
It's just because I have a grudge.
Pretty tight.
Anyway, sometime after the announcement
goes out about the mechanical difficulties that they decide they're going to they're
trying to say like, hi, we're having mechanical difficulties,
so we're going to go into a holding pattern.
So you understand to keep everybody calm.
Right.
So the unsub starts getting a little
jumpy about things at this point, because now he's just
like, in his mind, he's probably thinking like, oh, the FBI is
gonna like snipe me or some shit, when I get down there or
whatever. And he becomes very adamant that he will indeed
blow up the plane if there's any funny business. Everybody's in a
foul mood about it. First Officer Radicek specifically is
worried about a group of passengers. He didn't want to
get worked up. If word got out, what was happening?
Here's Jesse with a quote from first officer Radochek.
I know we picked up some good old Montana mountain boys and they're pretty good size
and they're sitting up in first class and they were on their second or third martinis.
We don't need them to look at each other and say, Hey, let's go back and get a hijacker.
Right. So it's like, I's a, it's a valid concern, right? When there's like drunk cowboys
on your plane and you, you know, if they find out there's somebody with a bomb, they're
going to be like, let's get them. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Living in Texas. Yeah. Yeah. Actually
it wasn't until 2016 that we found out how spot on he was with that concern. Apparently, according to
one of the other passengers, George LaBessonniere, who was headed back to his seat from the bathroom
at one point, while they were in a holding pattern, Tina got up from row 18 to intercept
a man in a cowboy hat who was headed towards them and seemed heated about being stuck in
the air for the mechanical difficulties. So he's like mad because he's late or whatever right. At first the unsub seemed kind of excited about what was
going on like he was like like getting hype because it was all his fault. But eventually he
started like wigging out and he got involved with the cowboy man and like got up and like started
yelling at the dude and telling him to get the fuck out of there. So actually, LeBassonnier had to like step in and like diffuse it. Tina
gave the guy a copy of the New Yorker to like go read at his seat, whatever.
That'll help. Go read the newspaper.
But here's a quote about him from the book for Mathis to read, which I think is kind
of interesting.
A newsreel on KIROTV dated November 25th, 1971 records some of the passengers of flight 305
apparently leaving Seattle airport.
Among them is a cowboy.
He looks young, maybe under 30, average height,
clean cut, square jawed.
He is chewing gum.
His hat is a dark color and so is his shirt.
He does not look at all fazed by this experience.
The cowboy has never been identified.
And if you wanna see him, go to about 30 seconds in this clip and you can
actually see this cowboy in his shirt, leave the plane,
which I think is really fun. Um, and, uh, just get an idea of, you know,
it just, it just places you in the moment. Yep. That's a cowboy.
So is that, that's the guy that's almost certainly the cowboy that confronted
the DB Cooper in the air, which is so fun
Yeah, I guess how many people are wearing cowboy hats on the plane. Just this guy. Yeah, just him. That's that. Yeah one guy
I don't know why but I get that weird vibe of like if he was a Star Wars character
He'd have a very deep complicated
Background there are only there only it's it's a six row plane
There's six seats in row plane and there's 18 rows, but there are only 36 people
on the plane, just in case you're wondering.
And then after that happened,
this flight is not always packed, it's a very short flight.
Here's Norm with the unsub's response to Tina
after the altercation.
If that is a sky marshal, I don't want any more of that.
Yeah, so it fucking wigged him out, even though it was just a fight with some cowboy dude.
The hijacker confirms to the pilot that he doesn't want to tell the passengers they've been hijacked.
He starts to get really grabby with things like cigarette boxes and match books, which he doesn't want left behind.
He even asked Tina to get his notes back from the cockpit...
...that he left for the stewardesses.
At 5.15, the unsub starts to get restless.
And at 522, the crew sends more messages
to Northwest Oriental, which Mathis will read for us now.
The hijacker has inquired three times now about the shoots.
He is not accepting the fact
that they are not available locally.
He is fully aware that McCord Field is 20 miles away.
McCord Field is a military airfield
that he believes
should have parachutes at it, right?
You would think they would, right?
He's like, what, like you telling me
you can't just get some or whatever?
So shortly after that, the unsub also looks out the window,
clocks that they're over Tacoma, Washington,
even though nobody's mentioned
that they're over Tacoma, Washington.
He just goes, oh, I'm, oh, look, it's Tacoma,
which is like this and the McCord thing, like, people take to mean that maybe
he knows this area by air, you know, so that's worth thinking
about. At 537pm flight 305 messages that they're on final
approach, and Northwest oriental radios back everything's ready
for them. 547 10 minutes later, the plane is finally on the
ground in Seattle, almost three hours after leaving Portland for a 36 minute flight.
Following instructions from the man, Tina goes out, gets the bag of money, gives it
back to the guy who hits the bathroom for a second to rearrange the money into neater
bundles.
Then he comes out and allows everyone off the plane besides Tina, the pilot, the co-pilot
and the flight engineers.
Basically the flight crew, Tina and that's it.
Tina goes down to grab the parachutes and stuff. She does three trips fully. He assures her the
parachutes won't be too heavy to carry, demonstrating that he knows how heavy parachutes are,
brings them aboard, and the first leg of this crazy night is over. Isn't that nice?
But also consider this. When a commercial pilot deals with hijacking, there is a transponder in
the cockpit that you can turn on, which transmits
a signal colloquially known as a squawk, which will change your
code on the radar and alerts air traffic controllers to like
whatever's going on. So in the case of a hijacking, there's
lots of codes you can use for this. But at the time, I think
right now it's 7500 is the squat code for hijacking. But at the
time was 3100. And the moment they knew about it
They should have squat because it's easy to do discreetly from the flight deck. There's no way
The unsub couldn't have known they did it from where they were
And yet they did not do it on this flight
Maybe the captain did this because he didn't want a big scene when they landed on the ground at SeaTac with like FBI guys
And rifles and shit, but nobody knows why they didn't squawk. Nobody mentions it.
Captain Scott himself died in 2001.
He was very terse about the whole situation.
I think he just liked to keep to himself.
There's not really anything suspicious about it,
but he died in 2001.
No, I can imagine just like the bad day
that he never gets to forget.
And so he just didn't really talk about it very much
and he died in 2001.
So yeah.
But now that we're done with the first flight, what should we do with this short intermission? A secret code? A mysterious phrase? A complicated
number? No. H8 is over, gentlemen. And today, instead, in honor of our guest Norm, I'm just
going to read five pieces of interesting trivia that I collected about author, content
creator and toy historian, Pixel Dan Erdly.
Number one.
Very excited.
Number one.
Did you know that we are currently in the midst of year 12 of Advent Calendar Madness
over at youtube.com slash Pixel Dan Vlogs, his second channel just for Advent Calendar
Madness?
It's more of a question than a fact, but you get what I'm saying.
Number two, Pixel Dan is older than me,
but he looks younger than me.
I guess that's an opinion thing,
but you know what I mean, he's healthier than me.
You get it, you get what I'm saying.
It's another-
He's been working out lately, Alex.
He's looking good.
He's in wrestling shape.
Yeah, he's got a good thing going on, yeah.
Fact number three about Pixel Dan.
For some reason, when I Google Pixel Dan,
a version of his Patreon page that's been
auto-translated into German comes up before his actual English Patreon page.
Maybe that's just a thing on my computer, but I don't know.
But I thought it might be worth sharing.
Number four, on the official Penguin Random House Library website, in the description
for his book, The Toys of He-Man and the Masters of the Universe from Dark Horsewood, which
you should buy, it calls Pixel Dan a YouTube influencer.
If you think about it, I guess he is, but I just thought it was funny that he always calls himself an author,
content creator, and toy historian, but they called him an influencer.
Pixel Dan is a man of many talents.
Exactly, and
finally, fact number five, this past Halloween,
Pixel Dan dressed himself up as himself in fourth grade,
dressed as Raphael the Ninja Turtle in 1988.
He used the He-Man sword as his scythe.
And you can see a picture of it right there if you guys want to see it.
I just want to check out Pixel Dan as Raphael.
He's a YouTuber, you know, he's just a toy YouTuber.
Check him out, He's an author
Norm's a big fan. That's all I'm just we're just think we're just we're just doing some service. You know I'm so
I just like pixel then anyway
You took like I feel like you took a hard turn off of like the highway
But I'm still on the highway gliding through this can this connected at any way to DB Cooper, like Pixel Dan?
I'm so confused.
Is Pixel Dan DB Cooper?
You think at the end I'm going to say that Pixel Dan is DB Cooper?
I can tell you this.
I don't know where we're going with this.
I'll tell you this, nothing's further from the truth.
Pixel Dan is an angel and he should be protected.
He is.
Anyway, back to that guy who hijacked a plane with a bomb in the 70s and got $200,000 cash
in his parachutes.
So real quick, back on the ground where they were refueling Tina now has a pencil
and she's taking down instructions for what comes next from the hijacker.
Uh, so here's Jesse with a quote.
He said, we're going to Mexico city, landing gear down flaps down.
You can trim the flaps to 15.
You can stop anywhere in Mexico to refuel, but nowhere in the United States, the
aft door must be open and the ventral stairs to be down.
The altitude under 10,000 feet.
They know they can't go over that cabin lights out and everyone is to be forward in the first class curtain.
Yeah, so nobody can go back to the back of the plane.
Basically, there are, of course, the types of details here that convince people.
This guy probably had some kind of knowledge of jumping, probably also spent time on course the types of details here that convince people this guy probably had some kind
of knowledge of jumping, probably also spent time
on a flight deck, something like that.
He was also a hero because he got all these people
first class.
Yeah, that's right.
He said don't you dare come out of first class.
What do you think what first class is like?
Everyone's first class on this flight.
What do you think first class in 1970s was like?
Oh, go look it up, there's photos of it,
it looks incredible.
Oh really?
Although I would hate it because you're in a tube and half the
people are smoking. So yeah,
you true. Yeah, true.
I'd be like, it's like a private jet compared to now though.
Anyway, yeah.
This line was a luxury back then.
Exactly. Yeah, true.
We'll talk more about who the fuck this guy might have
actually reasonably been in another episode. I don't want to
get too far down into the details that he kind of gives away by
being so specific
with his demands on where the plane should go and how it should go. But there is something to that.
And that's one of the many avenues to go down in the story. But yeah, this causes a flurry of
planning between ground control, the flight crew about which routes they can possibly take to get
him where he wants to go under the specific conditions he asked for.
But rather than break that down,
we'll leave that very juicy portion of the investigation
again for after you've got the timeline down
and your wide view is sorted.
So the only thing you really need to know right now
is that the configuration he asked for
limited the plane's range to about a thousand miles, right?
So that means it literally needed to refuel a second time
before getting to Mexico. They talked to him about it. They came to the agreement between them that he was
gonna stay on the plane and they were gonna land in Reno at Reno Tahoe
International, refuel one more time, and then finish the the rest of the flight.
Right? So that's where they that's where they landed on that. Back to row 18 in
the on the plane. First things first, they soon realized they can't really take off with the air stairs down like he wants.
So here's Mathis with a quote from the FBI report about what happened next there.
The hijacker also indicated that he wanted takeoff made with the rear door open and the stairs extended for takeoff.
The crew informed the hijacker that takeoff in that aircraft with the door open and the stairs extended would be an impossibility.
It was finally agreed that takeoff would be made
with the door closed, stairs retracted,
and Ms. Mucklau would remain on board
to lower the door and stairs after the craft was airborne.
As soon as this lowering of the door and stairs
were accomplished in flight,
she would be permitted to go to the pilot's compartment.
After the plane was airborne,
there was a conversation between Ms. Muklao and the hijacker
regarding her opening the door and extending the stairway.
Shortly thereafter, he asked her to demonstrate to him the procedure for opening the rear
door and extending the stairway.
She did this and was under the impression that he understood how to do it.
Yeah.
But what probably ends up happening though, since we're just comparing some conflicting
accounts here, is that he really wanted them both open the whole
time. So we wouldn't have to think about it. And like, the
plane would already be ready for him to do whatever you want to
do before it was even off the ground, which I think is it
makes sense. But they compromised in the end to where
the door the door was open, because the plane wouldn't take
off with the with the stairs down. But the door was open,
leading to the stairs, which was like more than the flight crew wanted
to do.
But it was like a compromise with him that they would leave the door open and leave the
stairs shut.
So in that way, they compromised, but also it meant that the actual cabin was going to
be depressurized the entire time because that's where the seal is for the cabin.
So the whole time for this second flight that they're up in the air, which is for a while, they are not in a pressurized cabin. Maybe in the flight
deck, but I don't think so. Also, he decides not to have Tina do the stair bit. He just does it himself.
And so that's nuts. He sends her to the flight deck just like Florence. Tina's testimony ends here.
We don't need to hear from her anymore because she's safe in the cockpit now.
On her way to the door though, she sees him messing with the parachutes and she asks him to please take the bomb with him when he jumps.
He promises to either take it with him or disarm it before he leaves. No worries.
So with everything all set, the unsub gets the four parachutes that he asked for.
He gets the money, but he realizes that one small issue he has is that the money was delivered in a cloth bag instead of a knapsack like
he asked. It's not exactly a deal breaker, but it left him having to figure out a way
to attach the money to his body where it'll survive a parachute jump without like flying
everywhere. And so to do that, he decides he has to mutilate one of the parachute bags
with a small jackknife that he has in his pocket. He chooses one of the front reserve chutes, messes with it for a while before deciding to just leave it behind. He puts
on the front chutes by the way are reserve chutes, back chutes are real chutes, that's just how it
works at this time. I don't know how it is now, but that was the vibe. He puts on the other front
reserve chute, he sees the two big chutes for his back, he rejects one that's in like a fancy luxury bag, goes for the military bag one, even though
they're basically the same parachute on the inside.
People speculate it's because he was like, this is not a real parachute.
This is a good one over here, or something like that, displaying knowledge of jumping
gear, maybe, but again, who knows?
Instead, he accepts the other military parachute in a military bag, presumably finds
some other way to attach the money to his body. And then that's it. This is where we
enter the sort of nexus of vagary, right? Because when does he get out of the airplane?
I don't know. I'll tell you. It has something to do with the air stare, which as you recall,
supposedly down at this point, which he did by himself. But actually,
first, let's recap what happens if you take off now that we know where they're going,
which is Mexico by way of Reno. They took off at 7.36pm that night. At 7.40, they're logged by flight
operations to be somewhere on an arc between Lakewood and Pulleyallup, Washington, but no exact
location was known. And at the same moment, the cockpit door is briefly open
to allow Tina Mucklo inside.
So that's just like syncing ups everything that's happening.
Somewhere in the next two minutes,
there's a message to the flight deck
from the hijacker via intercom.
Now that the unsub has no more lines,
let's get Norm into the reading rotation with the books.
Easier to read interpretation of a transmission
from the flight deck about that moment.
Here we go, this is for Norm.
We are outbound from Seattle at 14 miles DME on Airway Victor 23 out of Seattle.
The hijacker is trying to get the aft door down.
The stewardess is with us.
He cannot get the aft stairs down.
They know this because the stair light is on, which means that the stairs are not locked
in place either open or closed. So that's what that
light means. They see it, they can tell that he's kind of like
trying to figure it out. But they wouldn't go all the way
down. So we're not exactly sure what happens next. It might have
something to do with drag from the plane, who knows. But
something happens, which they do not fully report, that seemingly
suddenly convinces the flight crew that he's finally gotten
the stairs down in the next few minutes. Probably just literally the light turns
off but we don't know. We don't know why they suddenly said okay he's got him
down. The book suggests maybe he had some knowledge about 727s and that he might
have known that this plane you don't need to use the mechanism if you just
push the fucking stairs you can get them to lock in place in a sort of analog way
that you'd have to have
knowledge to know, but they didn't know whether or not they had time to worry
about it
so here's Norm with another quote from the flight crew at around 7.52pm as to why
Stu Muklow says he has knapsack on
planning to jump.
Think he's going to leave any time.
We want to give him as much time as possible.
Yeah, so Stu Muklo is the stewardess Muklo, Tina.
So she's like, okay, he's got everything on.
He's like getting ready to jump back there right now.
We just want to like leave him alone and let him do it.
We don't want to like give him any funny ideas or make him freak out at the last minute or
anything.
So we're just going to let him do it. Obviously she hasn't seen whether he
use the knapsack or not for the money.
So she doesn't know that he may not be wearing a knapsack.
So she just says he's got the knapsack on at seven 53, one minute later,
they level off at the 10,000 feet mark that they,
that he told him to stay at by seven 59.
They're passing over Toledo, Washington.
At 8.05, there's another transmission confirming
he seems to be busy with something in the back,
which Norm will read for us now.
He's like, yeah, here we go.
We have attempted on two occasions
to make contact with the individual.
He did not reply.
Then he came on the public address system
and he said that everything is okay.
Yeah, so he's like, they're trying to get ahold of him. He
doesn't say anything finally. He's like, Ah, yep, we're good.
Suddenly, though, Han soloed them. Yeah, we're all fine here.
How are you? However, at around 810pm, things change in the
cabin. The crew began reporting some quote, oscillations,
causing them to assume that he's doing something with the stairs.
They said he was playing with the stairs or something at that point. Here's a quote for
Jesse to read from 2014. An interview was done with the flight engineer at the flight deck,
Harold Anderson, for a little more information on what was going on at that point.
It wasn't smooth even before the oscillation started. We had noticed, what we noticed was the pattern of the oscillations was continuing and there was a very
minor disruption of the slipstream. I saw at first and alerted Captain Scott and Bill Rattick-Zack.
Scott said at first he wasn't feeling anything for sure, then a little later he thought there
was more drag and the nose was deviating a little. More time passed and then suddenly came that bump, a single pressure
event we felt in our ears, and nothing following, not even more fluctuations. After the final
bump, which we felt in our ears, we all discussed it for a while, waiting for another bump, and never
repeated. I just don't recall how much time lapsed between feeling the final bump and
reporting it to NWA via radio.
Yeah. So best guess for this is the unsub testing out something with the air stair.
Maybe bringing it up and down, maybe that's why the oscillations were happening and he
was like changing the airflow. Because like I say, the door is open.
It's basically like having a hole in your fuselage.
So if he's opening and closing this hole,
it's like changing the whole situation
with the aerodynamics of the plane.
There's even a moment while he's fucking around with it
that it looks like it locks closed for a second,
but then it unlocks again.
So who knows what the fuck's going on?
But then yeah.
He's like, go, he's like, I'm gonna do it this time. Yeah, I think
Genuinely do I get you anything? That's what he's doing. But then you hear this bump and then it's like done. Nothing else happens
So was the bump him getting on the stairs and jumping you think it's like the general
accepted story, but nobody knows and at this point at 80.
The stairs are sticking out of the plane, right?
The ventral stairs, they're like underneath in the back.
I'm saying, wouldn't the minute he stepped,
if he didn't jump, if he just stepped on the stairs,
he'd just immediately get fucking blown off of them
like sideways.
Maybe he was like holding onto the sides.
I wonder like, he didn't think about that
and then he was like, gone.
I think he I think he thought about it regardless, because this was a pretty
complex op that he pulled off here. Sure.
But the point is that 818 after this bump, even though it's a few minutes
after the bump, they have no reason to believe he's he's not still on the plane.
So the flight hits another beacon. It positions them south of Portland.
So now they're like all the way back to Portland
near Tualatin, Washington.
8.30 they try to communicate with him again.
He doesn't answer.
They don't know it yet, but like 25 minutes ago
was the last time anybody ever talked to this guy.
At 8.50, they were somewhere over Eugene, Oregon.
At nine o'clock, they decided not to try
and contact him again until they got to Reno just in case they
didn't want to mess with him.
920, the FBI asks them if they'll try to talk to him as much as possible, but they
decide they don't want to.
They emphasize that communication has not been going well with him and that he gets
edgy and stressed out when they try to talk to him.
So they'll just ask him to raise the stairs when he gets to Reno.
At 832, the FBI asks, or 932, the FBI asked them if they'll try and negotiate with him to allow the gear and flaps up out of Reno towards Mexico, like for the last leg of the flight. They do not do it.
At 935, they're south of Medford, Oregon. At 940, The FBI is like, what if we just like cool down the cabin till he like freezes a little
bit and he can't think right?
They don't do that either.
Ten minutes later, they're headed over Red Bluff, California.
They've passed the southern border of Oregon at 959.
The FBI asks about the air stare.
The air crew, the flight crew does not respond again at 1011.
They turn around and head towards Reno.
This is crazy that the FBI is like, hello, hello.
And they're just not responding to them.
The ghost in them.
Not right now.
They know that the plane is there, but they just aren't talking.
Well, and the weird plan of freezing him, I think that's bizarre.
It's cruel.
I love that idea.
That's like outside the box.
How do we get this? It's cruel. It's a crazy idea. That's like a such a outside the box. Like, yeah, I don't get evil villains. I think putting,
I would think putting like a bad parachute is also like insane. Um, but, uh,
just a guy like jumping out of a plane to his death and he doesn't know it.
It's like crazy. Um, 10 36 though,
at 10 11 is when they turn towards Reno at 10 11,
25 minutes later 25 minutes later is when they finally radio back to air traffic control
So that so there was a huge amount of time without talking to radio traffic control
And here's norm with the quote that they said okay
We're trying to make contact with the back now, and're going to get these steps up before we can make our landing
Yeah, so they decide they're going to try and call the hijacker perfect pilot voice. Yeah. Thank you
Just like sounds just like the unsub they decide they're going to try and call the hijacker on the intercom
Getting to agree to help them with the stairs because otherwise they have no way of controlling them without violating his demands
Tina calls him one last time over the pa giving him a final final warning. Here's Jesse with the message. Tina said,
Sir, we are going to land now. Please put up the stairs. We are going to land anyway, but
the aircraft may be structurally damaged, and we may not be able to take off after we've
landed.
But it plays to an empty room. there's no reply. Here's Norm with
the response from the flight crew to the tower.
We haven't been able to get ahold of anybody yet. Trying to contact him and they're still
down. So I, we haven't decided yet and we might come in and land with them down. There'd
be some sparks.
So, yeah, so they just decide they have no way of putting this thing down. There'd be some sparks, so... Yeah, so they just decide they have no way of putting
this thing down, so rather than risk going out of the cockpit, they're just gonna land
with it down. It's totally fine to do that, just dangerous, and like, if he's like standing
on it or something, it could be bad for him. So that's why they're like kind of nervous
about it, but they arrive on approach to Reno about 1048. After landing at 1102 with a few
sparks indeed trailing on the way in at 1113, they radio
Reno Tower.
Here is Norm with the message.
Okay, sir.
Be advised that we apparently, our passenger took leave of us somewhere between here and
Seattle.
We have made a rather cursory examination of the aircraft for the Briefcase and we are unable to do this. We're gonna take leave of the aircraft
Yeah, and they do and the same weird
Like the like literally that they're like don't like there's something wrong with the door don't come out and they're like no
We're leaving and they like actually walk out the like busted-ass steps that like on the back of the plane to just like now
We're good. There's probably a there might be one fucking bomb on this fucking plane and yeah we're fucking getting off of it um and all for all anyone knows
at this point November 24th 1971 the day before Thanksgiving finally done um all we know is that
somewhere between 8 0 5 p.m and 11 02 p.m this guy took the money and left the plane before it
landed at Reno Tahoe International Airport and something happened with the bomb as well. We don't know what happened to it.
This marks the end of the hijacking and the beginning of trying to figure out who did it.
This time as a second little mini break for us, I am not going to read five more facts about Pixel Dan.
But I am going to show you a picture, just in case you haven't seen it yet, of his very first Christmas ornament,
which was a little white Avon bear with a sash on it showing his birth year of 1972,
which he posted on Blue Sky. So you can have a look at that. Isn't that nice?
Am I missing something?
No, there's nothing to miss. Pixel Dan is just a sweet guy who's nice and good.
We just stan Pixel Dan.
Yeah, I'm a pixel Stan. That's it
I hate that. I got an internal server error. That's probably cuz it's airing out. This is
Fossey on a trick. It's an ARG. I don't like this
Fossey on he works for the
ARG this is just love pixel then do you think is a soft disclosure of pixel Dan being some sort of anagram for alien?
No, I'd be fucking Dan the worst softest glad be so disappointed and alien doesn't matter and alien so
Yeah, and just a cute just a cute thing just a cute thing that pixel there is or Christmas ornaments good stuff
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Strangely, when the FBI boarded the plane, after all this is
over, they found, they found a black
town craft tie with a yellow gold tie clasp from J.C.
Penney left behind on seat 18E.
But even though it's probably the tie everyone saw him wearing, nobody can actually conclusively
connect it to the unsub.
No one can ascribe any significance to this tie.
There's no meaningful leads generated by it, even though they did pull some DNA
off of it and pollen off of it, it's never been matched to anyone or led to anywhere
really intriguing, and there's no guarantee that the DNA is even the unsub's DNA, because
if he bought everything secondhand, it's possible that that's just some hobo's tie that, like,
he threw up on and then donated to the goodwill, and we'll never know.
So, you know, there's really nothing we do to tie.
And I mean, nothing about the sunglasses either, by the way.
If you really think about it, how could there be a version of the sketch with his actual
face under it if he wore glasses while he was on the plane when everybody was looking
at him?
And why would he put sunglasses on inside of a plane after he was already aboard
the plane and literally every single person involved in the hijacking already saw his
face and spoke to him? If you're thinking that somehow the sunglasses would help him
para jump out of an airplane at 8 p.m. at night, I don't think that you understand what
it would be like to jump out of a plane at 8 p.m. at night.
Maybe he just wanted to be cool.
Yeah, Seattle Wilderness.
Yeah, he maybe did, but I just don't know when he would have put
those glasses on or why he would have done so.
It would be the weirdest thing ever for him to do that.
Yeah, it would.
I'm just imagining him about to jump and he puts on the sunglasses
and he's like, let's do this.
And then he jumps out. Yeah.
Here's the thing.
Like, I want him to have the sunglasses, too.
I want him to dress like a little mod rock star. I want him to be that. I want him to be Lupin the third. I want him to be the sunglasses too. I want him to dress like a little mod rock star.
I want him to be that. I want him to be Lupin the third. I want him to be that. But he's not. He's
just he's just he's like a guy who doesn't wear suits normally probably leaping out of a plane.
This is such a crazy story. It's pretty much the long and short of it for a good long time.
There was a placard from the outside fuselage of a Boeing 727 that is found in the remote woods,
12 miles east of Castle Rock, Washington in 1978,
which is a couple years after.
Nothing connects it directly to Flight 305.
Apparently these things fall off of airplanes all the time.
So there's no even guarantee that any funny business
had to occur for there to be one in the woods.
And it was, hilariously, he flew a Boeing airplane. So you know, that shit's fucking
falling apart. To be fair, at the time, Boeing was gold standard.
The 70s. Yeah, I forget when they merged with the it was when they was when they merged
with McDonnell Douglas that everything went down. 1978 that occurs. The only thing that
ever happens ever definitively in this case again, for sure. Two years later in 1980,
where there's a big discovery on February 10, 1980. The Ingram family was camping along
the Columbia River in Washington at a beach called Tina Bar, Tenna Bar in Clark County,
Washington, when their eight year old son Brian finds three bundles of rotted $20 bills
an inch or two below the surface of the sand on this
beach, still held together by brittle little rubber bands that crumble away as he touches
them. That total of value about $5,800 in cash. Immediately, the FBI takes the money,
checks to see if the serial numbers match up with the money from the D.B. Cooper case
from nine years ago. Every last number is is a match so it's definitely the money that was on the plane that day
This was money from the hijacking and the only bills from it ever found anywhere
Anywhere in circulation like there wasn't any other DB Cooper bill that was found to be spent
By somebody who lived for example
We can't do much with this info deposit anything about the unsub as a person, or his course after
leaving the plane really, unless you want to really, really deep
dive into the topography of Washington and the riverlands
there. And like, there was like a dredging that happened that
probably didn't do anything, but there's like tributaries that
it could have come from, and tributaries that it couldn't
have come from. And it's all this huge, complicated mess. And
that already is assuming a bunch of things. But it is a weird place
to have found the money a little bit. I'll say that. And I also
will say that in 2009. And in 2021, the area where this money
was likely found was calculated to within about 257 feet to a
spot that is 2.5 miles outside the Victor 23 corridor, which is
a corridor
of air currents that flight 305 used on their flight south from
Seattle to Reno. So here's a Google Maps link to the area
where the the money was found if you want to kind of look at it
and zoom out and kind of see maybe where DB Cooper landed,
you know, it's a Google Maps link. So you just got to kind
of you can zoom out.
I think the best way to get a sense of it
is to pull up the satellite image if you can.
In your browser.
It's like pretty far inland.
Like it's like, it's like north of Vancouver, Oregon,
if you know where that is.
Like north of Portland and Beaverton of Vancouver.
Yeah, he definitely, yeah, it's a weird little stretch.
Yeah, it's in like the very. Yeah, it's in it's in like the very very the very very like
Northwest area part of Vancouver. Yeah, very very very bordering
Oregon in Washington. Mm-hmm. So I mean there's just fucking words. Yeah, it's just fucking woods
Like there's a beach there and I think there's been some landscaping done like since but it's just fucking woods. Like there's a beach there, and I think there's been some landscaping done like since,
but it's just fucking woods.
Beyond this, there's tons of places to dig
into the facts of this case that can overturn
all sorts of crazy rocks
with all kinds of crazy bugs underneath
that will lead you to tons of different theories
that you will be totally sure about.
But before we go,
in lieu of trying to finger someone specific,
which we will do plenty of later this year in
further DB Cooper episodes, lots of what I wish the aliens
would do to me. I know that I know. Let's just have you guys
take turns reading a list of improbabilities that our author
Edwards identifies from this book to get us on the right
track for further thinking. I'm just gonna, they all have your
names written next to them. Just go ahead and read through them
one after the other like a script these are all
things that don't make sense I'm scrolling yeah these are all things that
don't make sense a mild mannered middle-aged man armed with no more than a
cheap briefcase containing six red cylinders and what looks like a battery
holds the lives of 36 passengers and six crew to ransom. The hijacker knows that it is practicable and safe
to parachute from at a Boeing 727 at 10,000 feet. The crew do not transmit the hijacking code on the
transponder from Portland to Seattle even though they're asked to and do on the way from Seattle
to Reno. The hijacker executes his leap to freedom wearing a business suit and loafers in the dark above the clouds and
By no by all accounts with densely timbered wilderness below having otherwise given every appearance of meticulous planning and the removal of evidence
The hijacker leaves a necktie on the airplane the flight path of the airplane is never established
The crew never tell air traffic control where they are, and
air traffic control never asks. No civilian radar data are retained. Military radar data
disappear. The flight data and cockpit recordings disappear.
Eight years later, some of the money is discovered on a riverbank upwind and upstream of where
the hijacker could have lost or discarded it.
Yeah, and these are just a few of the avenues you can take if you want to try and investigate
this mystery yourself. I did a quick Google search. One of the theories is that Captain
First Officer Radocek took his uniform off, goes and sits in the back of the plane,
pretends to be a hijacker, asks for $200,000, goes back into the flight deck and is like, he's gone. I don't know what
happened to him. That's why he's not on the manifest. That's why he's not anywhere. Interesting
thought. You know, demonstrates demonstrates a knowledge of everything makes sense. Right.
But what about the money? Like, he just probably just took it and walked somewhere else and then hid some in the woods one day.
Oh no.
He just needs to put it under his shirt in the cockpit, walk out of there.
There's no reason to wand the victim of hijacking as they get off the plane.
You know what I mean?
My point is, there's a million sensational theories that you can get instantly excited
about in this.
There's one that the book says about this guy
who is a luggage handler and box shipper type guy,
and it is the profile of somebody
that they never investigated.
There are so many ways that you can go about
deducing who this guy is.
And obviously, now that you know the verified parts
of D.B. Cooper's story, and hopefully you have a better sense
than you did when you started,
of the timeline of events and the characters involved,
that you're just sort of able to visualize
why this guy's insane gamble play,
even though nobody died and it didn't change the world
in any meaningful way, other than what I said earlier
about making there be metal detectors now.
How something like that created a mystery so big and
so deep that I chose it as the sequel to the JFK mystery. Right. So beyond this, the book does offer
private citizens, historical societies, the FBI, Clark County Sheriff's Department, along with
several others in Oregon, a few leads worth tracking down locations worth searching,
based on conclusions they've drawn from the data that was crunched in the earlier
chapters, lots of new insights on old theories, etc, which
will possibly touch on later, but also may not. It truly does
go deep beyond where a podcast version would be exciting in
some places this book. But man, seriously, if you're interested
in this mystery, this is the book to buy really has the good
facts in it. And also on top of all this, it's probably worth
mentioning that this series, the
DB Cooper series will only really continue if circumstances
outside my control don't make this mystery kind of irrelevant,
right? Because this is because, like I mentioned at the
beginning, like Mathis mentioned, there's been a very
recent development in the past few weeks that threatens to
finally solve this case. So first of all, let me just say
that if it is solved, there still will be one more episode, but it will be only one more DB Cooper episode, right? Where I say what happened. But either way, whether it's the end of the story or not, the next episode is going to be about a man called Richard McCoy Jr. Because he's the prime suspect in this new DB Cooper development and Dick McCoy, dude. Yeah. And if you think that episode isn't going to be called,
if you don't think that episode is going to be called DB
Cooper, the real McCoy, you're probably right, because I write
episode titles for all these episodes and it never gets
titled.
Would I try?
You never give me them.
So like, but I'm definitely going to write it on my notes.
DB Cooper, the title of the episode.
I'll use it.
Apparently, according to an article in The Guardian from
last month, the children of this man have recently come forward
claiming that their father, who's long dead, by the way,
this guy, Richard McCoy Jr. is the guy. And if they only
waited this long in the first place, because they weren't sure
if their mom, who was McCoy's wife was in on it, but she died
in 2020. So now these guys are like they reached out there's a youtube channel but this guy um i forget what
his name is i think his name is Greider um the channel is called probable cause did a couple
huge videos on the topic 2021 2022 uh culminated in a third video that came out last month, three weeks ago, stating that
the FBI actually contacted him and reopened their investigation which closed in 2016,
late last year on the strength of a parachute that they found in possession of the McCoys.
So here's so here so basically they said, after all this time, he made like a basically
a three and a half hour two part documentary documentary And then dug this parachute out sent it to the FBI and now he made another hour-long documentary. I haven't watched all this because
Like I'll tell you right now. It's like not the like best made content in the world and it's
To the point that it kind of makes me like not trust it that much, but it's it's worth checking out
I don't know like how real this is of course this guy's gonna say it's worth checking out. I don't know how real this is.
Of course this guy's gonna say it's real
because his channel is staked on it,
but apparently Richie McCoy Jr., this guy,
was arrested in 1972, two days after he hijacked
a different plane.
Oh, the slides in between of Comic Sans, bro.
Yeah, I know, I know.
This guy apparently hijacked a different plane a a year after DB Cooper jumped out of the plane over Provo with $500,000 cash
escaped from prison in 1974 and then was killed by an FBI agent three months later while he was on
the run. So that's who they're saying did it is a guy who actually like it's not crazy they did it because he actually did do an air heist this guy he's already he was one of the copycat zodiac criminals so yeah we'll
hear about him next either way maybe another suspect or two as well if things are still up in
the air by that point no pun intended or maybe we'll actually see this dude caught in our lifetimes
and one of the great american mysteries will finally be closed. Who knows? Either way, pretty exciting stuff. Maybe this guy isn't
so much the real McCoy as he is a big fake hoaxing everyone for money. Which reminds
me, it's time to say what the big reveal is. Okay, I'm excited to hear this. Do you guys
want to throw out a guess one last time? Try and keep it to 10 seconds or less. I'll still
give you credit. Jesse said it starts with an H.
Mathis said, body parts.
Body parts, I don't fucking know.
Jesse's partially correct.
Mathis is totally wrong.
Norm comes out of this looking like a champ.
This whole time, H8 has been leading to a brand new type
of Chiluminati episode all about hoaxes.
That's right, surprise. Next time on the show, it's the Chiluminati episode all about hoaxes.
That's right, surprise. Next time on the show,
it's the Chaluminati Hoaxmas Top Eight Hoaxes Special
featuring our pal Davis, H8, eight hoaxes.
Get it?
Can you even believe it?
How satisfied are you?
Anyway, Norm, thank you so much for coming on the show
and for reliving history with us today.
I'm sorry, Norm.
It was good to meet you.
If people want to see more unhinged and immaculately researched episodes of immense historical
value featuring Norm Caruso, where can they go to find that or anything else you'd like
to share?
Oh, please check out Kristen and I's history podcast and old timey podcast.
You can learn more.
Honestly, patreon.com slash old timey podcast is where you can learn everything.
And by the way, Alex, I'm going to do a little callback to your intro because this whole mystery
ties into historiography as well. Because one of my favorite quotes about history is history is the
memory of things said and done. And so all we have to go by for DB Cooper is the memories, the memories
of people. Yeah, exactly. When something insignificant happens to you, because these people weren't
told the plane was being hijacked, it's very hard to remember things, right? Right. They're
not memorable anymore. They had no idea they needed to pay attention, right? Exactly. Which
is, you know, kind of how I feel about these guys sometimes you know with my miss house with my great
mysteries dude I thought it was good I'm just I thought it would be more I don't
know thanks again for coming we'll see you guys next time for hoax miss don't
be a Grinch h8 get it hoaxes what a reveal that is it there is definitely
nothing more to this how fun youtube.com slash pixel Dan Mathis take us away
I have to do a mini-soda patreon.com slash to eliminate pod. We appreciate you. We love you. Thank you again norm. Goodbye
Me and my wife were sitting outside indulging on our porch one night enjoying ourselves
I needed to go to the bathroom
So I stepped back inside and after a few moments I hear my wife go, Holy shit, get out of here!
So I quickly dash back outside.
She's looking up at the sky in the fall.
I look up too and there's a perfect line of dozen lights traveling across the sky. So I'm out. Thanks for watching! you you