Wednesday, November 27, 2024

ANOTHER EXPERT, ANOTHER DB COOPER SOLUTION

 

By Rachel Bowman 


Daily Mail

Nov 27, 2024


On November 24, 1971, an unknown man dubbed DB Cooper hijacked a Boeing 727 at Seattle-Tacoma airport and demanded $200,000 cash

On November 24, 1971, an unknown man dubbed DB Cooper hijacked a Boeing 727 at Seattle-Tacoma airport and demanded $200,000 cash

 

Infamous airplane hijacker DB Cooper has been unmasked by DNA technology as a North Carolina father called Richard Floyd McCoy Jr, an expert has claimed.

McCoy's children - Chanté and Richard III 'Rick' - contacted YouTube investigator Dan Gryder after their mother died to confess they believed their parents were behind the DB Cooper hijacking mystery.

Now, in a bombshell update, Gryder told DailyMail.com FBI agents had asked Rick to provide a DNA sample, and that there were startling results.

Gryder claimed there are parts of Rick's DNA that lined up 'perfectly' with that of DB Cooper, possibly indicating a partial match of a relative. 

The FBI is now planning to exhume his body from where it is currently buried at the family's property, Gryder added.

The iconic hijacker, whose real identity has long remained unknown, commandeered a Boeing 727 at Seattle-Tacoma airport on November 24, 1971, and held its crew and passengers hostage with a bomb threat.

He demanded $200,000 in cash - the equivalent of $1.2 million today. Once he got the money - and four parachutes - he had the crew take off before sky-diving out over the dense Pacific Northwest woods. From there he vanished without a trace.

One of the few clues in the case is DNA found on a clip-on tie left on the plane in 1971. 

 

Once his demands were met and transferred onto the plane, Cooper had the crew take off before he jumped out

Once his demands were met and transferred onto the plane, Cooper had the crew take off before he jumped out

There have been many suspects over the years, including Richard Floyd McCoy Jr. (pictured) who was convicted of an eerily similar hijacking just months after the Cooper case

There have been many suspects over the years, including Richard Floyd McCoy Jr. (pictured) who was convicted of an eerily similar hijacking just months after the Cooper case

 

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