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georger 247
QuoteIf DBC went in as a no pull I think he would have been missed. A landlord, a postman, a relative, somebody might have connected the dots. There was a TON of publicity right after the event. Everyone was wondering who DBC was. If someone who bore some resemblance to the FBI sketches went missing right after the event, I think it would likely have commanded some attention.
It's pretty hard to just disappear one day and not have inquiries start. Cooper wasnt planning on Norjack being fatal, so I doubt that he would have done all the necessary prep for a clean unnoticed death.
377
Really! ?
Maybe he had already disappeared. That was the
attractiveness of EVicki's Dad with JT sure he was
he was Franz List or maybe Ed Sullivan.!
Hell I know people who have been gone for 50 years
and never missed. Whole communities of them.
Millions of them! You can see them listed on the
welfare rolls. Phd's driving cabs part time since 1974!
Being missing in America is easy to do. Everything
turned on its head in 1970. America has been run by
the wrong "found people" ever since. Generations
vanished! Poof! Dangling in the wind ...
The real question is: Where have the "found people"
been!

Farflung 0
But now the model has a parachute which went undetected along with a parachutist. But it could happen. What person are you suggesting is the one which was missed by family, mailmen and landlords?
Did you design equipment at Hughes that had buttons, knobs and blinking lights just in case? Or were those added according to need or customer requirements? Wouldn’t a car with four steering wheels be safer than one with three?
Cooper could have lived, that’s for sure, you just have to add the touch points and requirements to the model to make it work. Is there some data to support this, other than the absence of something?
Robert99 50
QuoteIf DBC went in as a no pull I think he would have been missed. A landlord, a postman, a relative, somebody might have connected the dots. There was a TON of publicity right after the event. Everyone was wondering who DBC was. If someone who bore some resemblance to the FBI sketches went missing right after the event, I think it would likely have commanded some attention.
It's pretty hard to just disappear one day and not have inquiries start. Cooper wasnt planning on Norjack being fatal, so I doubt that he would have done all the necessary prep for a clean unnoticed death.
377
Would Cooper have hijacked an aircraft from his local airport?
Is there an area near where he apparently wanted to jump that had a relatively high transient population?
Did Cooper have assistants that would not notify the FBI even if they knew Cooper personally?
Questions and more questions.
Robert99
georger 247
QuoteQuoteIf DBC went in as a no pull I think he would have been missed. A landlord, a postman, a relative, somebody might have connected the dots. There was a TON of publicity right after the event. Everyone was wondering who DBC was. If someone who bore some resemblance to the FBI sketches went missing right after the event, I think it would likely have commanded some attention.
It's pretty hard to just disappear one day and not have inquiries start. Cooper wasnt planning on Norjack being fatal, so I doubt that he would have done all the necessary prep for a clean unnoticed death.
377
Would Cooper have hijacked an aircraft from his local airport?
Is there an area near where he apparently wanted to jump that had a relatively high transient population?
Did Cooper have assistants that would not notify the FBI even if they knew Cooper personally?
Questions and more questions.
Robert99
Half the whole population in the west and norwest
was transient - nonexstent.
Dont we know Cooper was a French Canadian
who worked in circuses? I thoutht Tom and Carol
proved that? "Git the show on the road". "American
currency negotiable..."
What we need here is a better paint gun, to slop
some paint on the Cooper case so its a modernist
revisionist piece of monkey art.
Oh! Almost forgot!
Are you done with those C3 tests so we know how
long (how many times) the Ingram money was
exposed to post 1950's nuclear testing air ?
I needed that data - yesterday! Stick the results
in an email and I'll transfer them to Rad Rocz.
Vilniczhovek wants to know too!
377 22
QuoteCooper could have lived, that’s for sure, you just have to add the touch points and requirements to the model to make it work. Is there some data to support this, other than the absence of something?
Nope, there isnt. I have ZERO evidence that proves Cooper lived.
The canopy was huge though, over 600 sq ft of nylon, which was either white or had multicolored high viz panels. There was about 644 feet of suspension lines too, lot of snag potential Even if the canopy stayed in the pack, the rig is pretty big. Even today they find intact canopies in submerged WW2 aircraft wrecks. If Cooper went in as a no pull, I'd have expected some evidence from his rig to be discovered.
JT thinks the unopened rig is out there somewhere in the Washougal, waiting to be discovered.
Crooks dont discard cash. The presence of thousands at Tena bar suggests to me that Cooper may have gone in as a no pull. Its also possible that he became separated from the money during the jump. That happened to one other skyjacker who survived the jump but landed penniless. That was one honest farmer that turned in the cash loot.
Like I said, the Tena bar money drives me nuts. It puts a constraint on the equation solution that looks so appealing, but in the end it proves nothing about who DBC was or what happened to him.
When the money was originally found I thought BINGO, soon the case will be solved. Boy was I wrong.
377
georger 247
377
JT also said there was never-ever any dredge spoils
put on the beachfront at the Fazios.
georger 247
Cemented was a relative term -
see attached - note the piles (as received) from the
Ingram. Posting order is random -
377 post a photo of yours ? I will locate it for you in
the original file, if its separated ?? have no idea.
would have to look.
Robert99 50
QuoteFarf wrote
QuoteCooper could have lived, that’s for sure, you just have to add the touch points and requirements to the model to make it work. Is there some data to support this, other than the absence of something?
Nope, there isnt. I have ZERO evidence that proves Cooper lived.
The canopy was huge though, over 600 sq ft of nylon, which was either white or had multicolored high viz panels. There was about 644 feet of suspension lines too, lot of snag potential Even if the canopy stayed in the pack, the rig is pretty big. Even today they find intact canopies in submerged WW2 aircraft wrecks. If Cooper went in as a no pull, I'd have expected some evidence from his rig to be discovered.
JT thinks the unopened rig is out there somewhere in the Washougal, waiting to be discovered.
Crooks dont discard cash. The presence of thousands at Tena bar suggests to me that Cooper may have gone in as a no pull. Its also possible that he became separated from the money during the jump. That happened to one other skyjacker who survived the jump but landed penniless. That was one honest farmer that turned in the cash loot.
Like I said, the Tena bar money drives me nuts. It puts a constraint on the equation solution that looks so appealing, but in the end it proves nothing about who DBC was or what happened to him.
When the money was originally found I thought BINGO, soon the case will be solved. Boy was I wrong.
377
Budda says that if you want to find Cooper and his rig, you have to search where he at, not where you hope he at, or even where you think he at.
The money at Tena Bar is a separate and independent data point. It doesn't indicate who Cooper was but it sure sugggests what happened to him.
Robert99
Farflung 0
But I do know that American currency is NOT made of paper but, cotton, linen and silk. That’s right, I took a tour of the Bureau of Engraving, so that makes me an expert and qualifies me to rebuke and denounce any statements I want to.
So I figure that currency would be consumed by critters that like cotton, linen or silk, and leave holes about the same shape and size. See how smart a few hour tour can make you? So here’s an initial guess:
http://www.entomology.wisc.edu/insectid/insect_info.php?363
Perhaps there is a bug-ologist or assistant bug-ologist who can answer this mystery.
Robert99 50
QuoteThose holes in the money look like bug chewings to me, but I can add entomology to the long, long, long list of crap I don’t know.
But I do know that American currency is NOT made of paper but, cotton, linen and silk. That’s right, I took a tour of the Bureau of Engraving, so that makes me an expert and qualifies me to rebuke and denounce any statements I want to.
So I figure that currency would be consumed by critters that like cotton, linen or silk, and leave holes about the same shape and size. See how smart a few hour tour can make you? So here’s an initial guess:
http://www.entomology.wisc.edu/insectid/insect_info.php?363
Perhaps there is a bug-ologist or assistant bug-ologist who can answer this mystery.
I'm not a bug-ologist but those critters seem to like air. Do they have any acquatic capabilities? Or even wet (or dry) sand capabilities? If the answer to these questions is no, then it looks like the bugs did their work when the money was exposed to the atmosphere and before it got to its discovery location.
Robert99
georger 247
QuoteThose holes in the money look like bug chewings to me, but I can add entomology to the long, long, long list of crap I don’t know.
But I do know that American currency is NOT made of paper but, cotton, linen and silk. That’s right, I took a tour of the Bureau of Engraving, so that makes me an expert and qualifies me to rebuke and denounce any statements I want to.
So I figure that currency would be consumed by critters that like cotton, linen or silk, and leave holes about the same shape and size. See how smart a few hour tour can make you? So here’s an initial guess:
http://www.entomology.wisc.edu/insectid/insect_info.php?363
Perhaps there is a bug-ologist or assistant bug-ologist who can answer this mystery.
Tom says bacteria, but Tom had no facility to do
the dna. Email Tom?
georger 247
QuoteQuoteThose holes in the money look like bug chewings to me, but I can add entomology to the long, long, long list of crap I don’t know.
But I do know that American currency is NOT made of paper but, cotton, linen and silk. That’s right, I took a tour of the Bureau of Engraving, so that makes me an expert and qualifies me to rebuke and denounce any statements I want to.
So I figure that currency would be consumed by critters that like cotton, linen or silk, and leave holes about the same shape and size. See how smart a few hour tour can make you? So here’s an initial guess:
http://www.entomology.wisc.edu/insectid/insect_info.php?363
Perhaps there is a bug-ologist or assistant bug-ologist who can answer this mystery.
I'm not a bug-ologist but those critters seem to like air. Do they have any acquatic capabilities? Or even wet (or dry) sand capabilities? If the answer to these questions is no, then it looks like the bugs did their work when the money was exposed to the atmosphere and before it got to its discovery location.
Robert99
Iwouldnt bet on that. every species has a zone of
habitation - yes? some zones go vertical. These
critters require oxygen - whoever they are. Oxygen
exchange levels vary as a functionof depth, temp.
etc. This aint rocket science!
There are 'vast' catalog of taxonomy of Columbia
shoreline species. Grants make people compete to
make them! One good taxonomist who knows an
area can answer your questions in 30 seconds! That
is no exaggeration. But you have to have some idea
of the questions to ask - that's the researcher's
responsibility. Universities are supposed to teach
people "how to think"!
These guys may shy away from UV. In today's world
you do dna testing to be sure.
377 22
QuoteUniversities are supposed to teach
people "how to think"!
If only they succeeded... sigh.
Sometimes I wonder if thinking is really teachable.
I want to know what ate those holes in my Tena Bar Twenty.
377
Robert99 50
QuoteG wrote
QuoteUniversities are supposed to teach
people "how to think"!
If only they succeeded... sigh.
Sometimes I wonder if thinking is really teachable.
I want to know what ate those holes in my Tena Bar Twenty.
377
377, You are starting with an assumption. What leads you to believe anything "ate" the money to cause those holes?
A better stated question would be, What caused those holes?
Robert99
Amazon 7
QuoteG wrote
QuoteUniversities are supposed to teach
people "how to think"!
If only they succeeded... sigh.
Sometimes I wonder if thinking is really teachable.
I want to know what ate those holes in my Tena Bar Twenty.
377
http://www.nwfsc.noaa.gov/publications/techmemos/tm26/tm26.htm
Farflung 0
I know what you’re thinking; what-the-Dickens does that mean?
I was looking at the images of the twenties which georger posted and was surprised at how vast the variance was of the condition. One bill was bug eaten, but looked indistinguishable from what is in my wallet now. The bill labeled ‘Rust’ showed much more wear and represented the opposite end of the spectrum.
Side by side they shared the same ‘insect’ or ‘bacteria?’ damage which indicates that whatever dined on these things, showed little preference for rusty versus clean bills.
Is the ‘Rusty’ bill what it looked like before Cooper got it? Or was the rust stain transferred afterwards? The heavy rust transfer would indicate an environment favoring air over being submerged in water perhaps? The relatively clean bill, presumably from the center of the mass, appears to have avoided any great or obvious water damage. Is this correct? I can almost make out some sort of shape with the rust pattern.
So is this evidence of being out of the water since rust would form and transfer more effectively that way, along with the cleaner bill? Is that the period when the bugs would have chowed down until being evicted by a watery ride to Tena Bar?
Nothing like spending a day realizing how little I know about so much, now I’m depressed.
377 22
Quote377, You are starting with an assumption. What leads you to believe anything "ate" the money to cause those holes?
A better stated question would be, What caused those holes?
Robert99
True! I am reminded that I am not a scientist, just an engineer. We assume starting conditions all the time.
377
georger 247
QuoteQuoteG wrote
QuoteUniversities are supposed to teach
people "how to think"!
If only they succeeded... sigh.
Sometimes I wonder if thinking is really teachable.
I want to know what ate those holes in my Tena Bar Twenty.
377
http://www.nwfsc.noaa.gov/publications/techmemos/tm26/tm26.htm
beautiful!
georger 247
QuoteIt was the best of bills, it was the worst of bills, it was the age of stupidity, it was the age of unimaginable stupidity…..
I know what you’re thinking; what-the-Dickens does that mean?
I was looking at the images of the twenties which georger posted and was surprised at how vast the variance was of the condition. One bill was bug eaten, but looked indistinguishable from what is in my wallet now. The bill labeled ‘Rust’ showed much more wear and represented the opposite end of the spectrum.
Side by side they shared the same ‘insect’ or ‘bacteria?’ damage which indicates that whatever dined on these things, showed little preference for rusty versus clean bills.
Is the ‘Rusty’ bill what it looked like before Cooper got it? Or was the rust stain transferred afterwards? The heavy rust transfer would indicate an environment favoring air over being submerged in water perhaps? The relatively clean bill, presumably from the center of the mass, appears to have avoided any great or obvious water damage. Is this correct? I can almost make out some sort of shape with the rust pattern.
So is this evidence of being out of the water since rust would form and transfer more effectively that way, along with the cleaner bill? Is that the period when the bugs would have chowed down until being evicted by a watery ride to Tena Bar?
Nothing like spending a day realizing how little I know about so much, now I’m depressed.
dont take rust literally - Tom says its not rust.
I dont know; never saw or handled/tested the bill.
That photo I posted is an old photo from years ago
when someone (Snowmman?) posted the photo,
and I believe it was 377 asked: "Whats that rust?"
People were looking for any sign of the parachute/
chute hardware in associattion with the money find
site. I labeled that photo 'rust' to keep track of that
photo in my files.. that's all. I am sure 377 will recall
and confirm that exchange from years ago here -
It's pretty hard to just disappear one day and not have inquiries start. Cooper wasnt planning on Norjack being fatal, so I doubt that he would have done all the necessary prep for a clean unnoticed death.
377
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