레이블이 Elliott and Company인 게시물을 표시합니다. 모든 게시물 표시
레이블이 Elliott and Company인 게시물을 표시합니다. 모든 게시물 표시

2013년 11월 24일 일요일

About 'accounting firms in calgary'|Can't hold down a job!







About 'accounting firms in calgary'|Can't hold down a job!














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    2013년 11월 23일 토요일

    About 'accounting firm calgary'|University of Calgary Prostitutes Itself To Big Oil & Gas







    About 'accounting firm calgary'|University of Calgary Prostitutes Itself To Big Oil & Gas








                   The               identity               of               infamous               skyjacker               D.B.

    Cooper               has               eluded               the               FBI               since               he               jumped               from               the               back               of               a               Boeing               727-100               with               200,000               dollars               somewhere               over               Woodland,               Washington               on               the               night               of               November               24,               1971.
                   Galen               Cook,               an               attorney               who               has               been               investigating               the               case               for               years               and               plans               to               write               a               book,               has               released               the               name               of               the               latest               suspect:               William               "Wolfgang"               Gossett.

    Information               concerning               Gossett               as               the               elusive               skyjacker               was               released               in               the               Depoe               Bay               Beacon,               an               Oregon               newspaper,               May               28,               2008.

    Cook               is               investigating               a               possible               witness               to               the               parachute               jump               from               the               jet,               the               possibility               that               D.B.

    Cooper               sent               letters               to               newspapers,               and               the               analysis               of               found               Cooper               money.

    The               FBI               has               shown               increasing               interest               in               Cook's               work               and               suspect               Gossett.

    Cook               was               told               in               August               2011               by               the               FBI               that               Gossett               is               still               a               viable               suspect               along               with               another               unnamed               suspect.
                   Ever               since               that               night,               the               FBI               has               investigated               over               200               suspects               but               none               has               ever               been               confirmed               as               the               skyjacker               by               the               FBI.

    [For               links               to               suspects               and               the               official               FBI               description               of               the               suspect               as               seen               on               the               skyjacked               plane,               see               "Links               to               Information               Concerning               Major               Suspects"               at               the               end               of               this               article.]
                   The               FBI               has               publicly               stated               that               they               do               not               believe               the               skyjacker               survived               the               jump,               a               case               code-named               "Norjak,"               which               remains               officially               unsolved               though               the               FBI               may               have               partial               fingerprints               from               the               elusive               skyjacker               left               on               a               cocktail               glass               or               other               sources.

    In               2001,               the               FBI               obtained               DNA               of               the               skyjacker               from               a               clip-on               tie               he               left               on               the               plane,               and               possibly               other               sources               like               cigarettes               the               skyjacker               smoked.

    Galen               Cook               was               informed               by               the               FBI               that               the               DNA               obtained               from               the               tie               was               probably               contaminated               and               not               reliable.

    Whether               there               is               any               reliable               DNA               associated               with               Cooper               is               questionable.
                   Here               is               what               we               know               of               Willam               P.

    Gossett               as               a               D.B.

    Cooper               suspect:
                   William               Pratt               Gos­sett               was               born               in               San               Diego               in               1930.

    He               served               with               the               U.S.

    Marines,               Army               Air               Force,               and               then               the               U.S.

    Army,               served               tours               and               was               decorated               for               action               in               Korea               and               Vietnam.

    He               was               a               survivalist               and               experienced               parachutist.

    He               was               an               ROTC               instructor               and               retired               from               the               Army               at               Ft.

    Lewis,               Washington               in               1973,               two               years               after               the               skyjacking.
                   Gossett               died               in               Oregon               on               September               1,               2003               of               natural               causes               at               age               73.
                   The               FBI               has               not               eliminated               him               as               a               potential               suspect               in               the               case,               and               he               is               the               only               major               suspect               that               has               not               been               eliminated               though               the               FBI               has               known               of               him               for               years.
                   He               often               spoke               of               the               D.B.

    Cooper               skyjacking.

    He               told               one               of               his               wives               that               he               could               "write               the               epitaph               for               D.B.

    Cooper."               William               Gossett               told               his               cousin               Charles               Gossett               that               he               knew               all               about               D.B.

    Cooper               but               could               not               talk               to               Charles               about               it.

    According               to               Gossett's               son               Greg,               William               Gossett               told               three               of               his               sons               he               was               the               skyjacker.

    Cook               says               he               confessed               that               he               was               the               skyjacker               to               a               retired               Salt               Lake               City               judge               and               a               close               friend               he               worked               with               in               the               Salt               Lake               City               public               defender's               office.
                   The               judge               told               Galen               Cook,               "In               1977,               he               walked               into               my               of­fice               and               closed               the               door               and               said               he               thought               he               might               be               in               some               trouble,               that               he               was               involved               in               a               hijacking               in               Portland               and               Seattle               a               few               years               ago               and               that               he               might               have               left               prints               behind.

    He               said               he               was               D.B.

    Cooper.

    I               told               him               to               keep               his               mouth               shut               and               don't               do               anything               stupid,               and               not               to               bring               it               up               again."               Did               Gossett               turn               over               any               incriminating               evidence               to               the               judge               concerning               this               case               as               it               relates               to               him?
                   Greg               Gossett,               contacted               Cook               in               late               2007               and               provided               information               that               allowed               Cook               to               investigate               William               Gossett               as               the               real               D.B.

    Cooper.

    Greg               says               his               father               kept               numerous               files               filled               with               D.B.

    Cooper               articles.
                   Greg               Gossett               claims               his               father               was               always               strapped               for               cash               and               had               a               gambling               problem.

    He               says               his               father               showed               him               wads               of               cash               just               before               the               Christmas               of               1971,               only               weeks               after               the               skyjacking.

    He               believes               he               stored               some               of               the               cash               in               a               Vancouver               safe               deposit               box               and               may               have               blown               much               of               it               at               Las               Vegas               casinos,               though               none               of               the               recorded               serial               numbers               of               the               cash               has               ever               been               found               with               the               exception               of               the               money               found               on               the               Columbia               River               in               1980               (see               Tina               Bar               Investigation               below).

    On               the               Coast               to               Coast               radio               show               on               November               26,               2011               a               woman               claiming               to               be               William               Gossett's               niece               said               she               remembers               her               uncle               having               an               unusual               large               amount               of               money               during               Christmas               of               1971,               confirming               Greg               Gossett's               similar               claim.


                   
    Gossett               worked               at               Weber               State               College               and               became               a               private               detective               who               specialized               in               money               fraud,               cults,               and               missing               persons.

    He               assisted               and               was               commended               by               the               FBI               for               his               help               in               rescuing               a               woman               from               the               Bhagwan               Rajneesh's               compound               in               Antelope,               Oregon.
                   In               the               mid               1970s,               Gossett               began               wearing               a               goatee               and               moustache               and               changed               his               name               to               "Wolfgang"               or               "Wolf."               In               1988,               he               officially               changed               his               name               to               "Wolfgang"               and               became               a               priest               in               the               Old               Catholic               Church,               SLC               Diocese.

    These               are               only               some               of               several               incidents               where               Gossett               seemingly               tried               to               hide               his               identity.

    When               serving               as               an               ROTC               instructor               at               Weber               College               in               Ogden,               Utah               in               the               early               1970s,               Gossett               never               mentioned               to               his               fellow               Army               buddies               that               he               had               served               ten               years               with               the               Marines               and               that               he               had               parachute               training,               accomplishments               any               serviceman               would               be               proud               to               admit.

    He               never               wore               his               jump               wings               on               his               uniform.

    When               Cook               shared               this               fact               with               a               retired               Lt.

    Colonel               who               had               been               with               Gossett's               ROTC               unit,               the               colonel               was               amazed               and               noted               that               all               Army               guys               who               served               first               in               the               Marines               let               the               Army               buddies               know               that.

    This               secret               was               verified               in               November               2011               when               Cook               released               information               concerning               interviews               with               all               of               the               living               ROTC               staff               that               knew               Gossett               at               Weber               State               College               in               1971,               Cook               reports               that               "not               one               of               the               ROTC               personnel               that               I               interviewed               knew               that               Gossett               had               previously               served               for               10               years               with               the               U.S.

    Marine               Corps,               and               none               of               them               knew               that               Gossett               was               'jump-rated'               with               the               Marine               Recons.

    Gossett               kept               all               that               to               himself,               which               is               unusual               in               the               military               world.

    Gossett               didn't               want               them               to               know               that               information,               and               they               didn't               know               it               until               I               told               them.

    They               were               surprised               as               hell."
                   "Opportunity,               and               a               bril­liant               plan,               was               the               key               to               the               whole               D.B.

    Cooper               thing,"               Cook               said.

    The               skyjacking               started               with               a               flight               from               Ogden               to               San               Francisco               to               Portland               where               he               hijacked               the               plane.

    It               was               flown               to               Seattle               where               he               demanded               the               ransom               and               parachutes.

    He               parachuted               from               a               rear               exit               of               the               Northwest               Orient               jet               near               Portland.

    "He               didn't               have               to               be               at               work               or               at               home,"               theorizes               Cook.

    "He               had               the               level               of               skills               and               ability               to               plan               the               entire               thing               with               military               precision,               and               to               not               only               parachute               from               the               plane               but               to               survive               .

    .

    .

    the               reason               he               avoided               detection               on               the               night               of               the               jump               and               the               following               days               was               because               searchers               were               looking               in               the               wrong               state.

    D.B.

    Cooper               cleared               the               Columbia               River               and               landed               in               Oregon,               where               he               made               his               way               back               to               the               airport               and               returned               to               Utah.

    It               took               him               three               days,               in               and               out."               
                   
    Cook               has               collected               DNA               samples               and               fingerprints               of               Gossett               and               passed               them               along               to               the               FBI.

    He               has               provided               a               full               set               of               Gossett's               fingerprints               for               the               FBI               and               the               Department               of               Justice.

    Cook               is               writing               a               book               on               Gossett               saying               that               it               will               be               an               incredible               story               about               a               man               "who               became               a               priest               and               marries               and               buries               people               when               he's               not               out               helping               the               FBI               solve               criminal               cases               .

    .

    .

    becomes               civic-minded               by               attending               City               Council               meetings               in               Depoe               Bay               and               becomes               a               late-life               jogger               who               runs               around               town               wearing               his               military               parachute               badge               on               his               headband               to               remind               himself               of               who               he               really               is."
                   The               only               other               solid               evidence               concerning               the               D.B.

    Cooper               case,               after               the               suspect               parachuted               from               the               jet,               is               $5880               found               on               the               banks               of               the               Columbia               River               by               eight-year-old               Brian               Ingram               in               February               of               1980.

    The               money               was               found               in               three               stacks               of               twenty               dollar               bills               buried               in               the               sand               of               the               river               bank.

    The               money               was               found               close               to               the               top               of               the               soil               with               the               stacks               resting               on               top               of               each               other               as               if               they               were               placed               their               by               hand.

    The               money               had               deteriorated               but               serial               numbers               confirmed               it               as               part               of               the               hijacked               money.

    The               found               money               brings               up               more               key               questions.

    Was               the               money               buried               by               Cooper               and               if               so               why?

    Were               these               three               stacks               of               bills               the               money               he               had               offered               the               stewardess               but               when               she               refused               he               put               it               into               his               pocket               and               it               flew               out               during               the               parachuting?

    Is               this               a               clue               that               Cooper               did               not               survive               the               jump?

    In               January               of               2012,               Galen               Cook               and               a               scientific               team               completed               a               three-year               study               of               the               money               found               on               the               river.

    [See               more               about               the               found               money               below               under               Tina               Bar               Investigation.]
                   Cook,               who               sued               the               FBI               in               2004               for               files               to               the               Cooper               case,               stated               in               the               same               broadcast               that               he               is               working               on               a               paper               trail               that               might               link               Gossett               and               the               hijacked               money               to               Northwest               American/Canadian               banks.

    Voice               recordings               of               Gossett               were               played               on               the               air               and               listeners               had               the               opportunity               to               hear               the               demeanor               of               the               latest               suspect,               though               the               subject               matter               of               the               recordings               were               unrelated               to               the               case.


                   
    Galen               Cook               has               interviewed               all               of               the               five               surviving               crew               members               of               the               D.B.

    Cooper               flight.

    Cook               showed               pictures               of               Gossett               to               one               of               the               flight               attendants               (Florence               Shaffner)               who               saw               the               Cooper               hijacker               at               close               range.

    She               told               Cook               that               Gossett               looked               like               the               hijacker               and               related               that               she               believed               the               hijacker               was               wearing               makeup               to               darken               his               skin.

    Cook               is               reserving               his               right               to               confidentiality               concerning               contact               with               flight               attendant,               Tina               Mucklow,               who               spent               the               most               time               with               Cooper.

    For               information               on               a               witness               who               sat               in               the               same               aisle               as               Cooper,               see               "William               Mitchell"               within               the               D.B.

    Cooper               letters               below               (letter               2).
                   Special               Agent               Carr               of               the               FBI               has               been               quoted               as               saying               that               "The               two               flight               attendants               who               spent               the               most               time               with               him               on               the               plane               were               interviewed               separately               the               same               night               in               separate               cities               and               gave               nearly               identical               descriptions.

    They               both               said               he               was               about               5'10"               to               6',               170               to               180               pounds,               in               his               mid-40s,               with               brown               eyes.

    People               on               the               ground               who               came               into               contact               with               him               also               gave               very               similar               descriptions."               At               the               time               of               the               skyjacking,               Gossett               was               41               years               old,               5'               10",               185               pounds               with               brown               eyes               and               short,               dark               hair               parted               on               the               left.
                   On               their               Web               site,               the               FBI               still               contends               that               no               experienced               parachutist               would               make               the               jump               required               by               Cooper.

    As               of               May               2010,               Carr               was               no               longer               part               of               the               Norjak               investigation.

    Norjak               is               now               under               the               FBI's               Northwest               organized               crime               unit.

    In               November               2010,               the               new               Norjak               case               agent               told               Galen               Cook               that               Ken               Christiansen               had               been               ruled               out               as               a               suspect               and               that               Gossett               was               "a               viable               suspect."
                   Gossett               was               married               numerous               times               but               according               to               Cook               was               known               to               be               a               loner.

    At               the               time               of               the               skyjacking,               Gossett               had               separated               from               his               first               wife               and               was               living               alone               in               an               apartment               in               Ogden,               Utah.
                   Cook               told               the               Standard               Examiner               in               November               of               2009               that               he               is               negotiating               with               a               British               Columbia               bank               to               gain               access               to               a               security               box               thought               to               be               Gossett's,               which               may               contain               ransom               money.
                   In               a               July               2008               interview               with               Dan               Tilkin               (Portland,               Oregon,               KATU),               Gossett's               wife               of               25               years               said               that               she               was               "kind               of               dumbfounded"               when               looking               at               Gossett's               picture               set               next               to               the               FBI               sketch               of               the               Cooper               suspect.

    "It               was               a               match,"               Marilyn               Smith               of               Sherwood,               Oregon               said.

    "He               never               told               me               he               was               D.B.

    Cooper               but               he               always               used               the               third               person.

    D.B.

    Cooper               would               have               hiked               out               this               way               or               he               would               have               done               this               .

    .

    ."               She               admitted               that               he               was               eccentric               and               loved               to               tell               stories               but               "in               the               D.B.

    Cooper               story,               that               would               never               change."
                   D.B.

    Cooper               Letters               of               1971               and               the               Link               to               Gossett
                   Four               letters               signed               by               "D.B.

    Cooper"               mailed               to               three               newspapers               within               days               after               the               hijacking               are               being               investigated               by               Galen               Cook.

    Cook               revealed               his               opinions               of               the               letters               to               Coast               to               Coast               radio               host               Ian               Punnett               on               January               1,               2011.
                   The               details               of               these               letters               were               reported               by               the               Reno               Evening               Gazette,               Reno,               Nevada               in               three               articles               on               November               29,               30,               and               December               3               of               1971,               only               days               after               the               November               24               hijacking.

    Upon               close               examination,               Cook               contends               that               each               of               the               letters               has               a               link               to               Gossett.
                   All               four               letters               were               turned               over               to               the               FBI.

    Only               the               Reno               Evening               Gazette               wrote               articles               about               these               letters.
                   Letter               1
                   On               November               29,               five               days               after               the               hijacking,               a               letter               arrived               at               the               Reno               Evening               Gazette               signed               D.B.

    Cooper.

    The               letter               was               postmarked               November               27               from               Oakdale,               California,               a               small               town               10               miles               north               of               Modesto,               California.

    It               was               simply               addressed               "Reno               News,               Reno,               Nevada."               The               author               of               the               letter               cut               words               from               the               November               26th               edition               of               the               Modesto               Bee               newspaper.

    The               letter               read:
                   Attention!
                   Thanks               for               the               hospitality.
                   Was               in               a               rut.
                   D.B.

    Cooper
                   By               November               26,               a               Portland,               Oregon               AP               writer               had               already               misidentified               the               suspect               from               "Dan               Cooper"               to               D.B.

    Cooper.

    Reno,               Nevada               was               where               the               hijacked               plane               landed               without               Cooper.

    Cook's               investigation               has               revealed               that               Gossett               lived               in               Merced,               California               in               the               1950's               with               his               first               wife,               had               children,               and               was               a               police               officer               for               one               year.

    Merced               is               just               40               miles               south               of               Oakdale,               California               the               place               where               the               first               letter               was               postmarked.

    The               Reno               Evening               Gazette               reported               on               the               letter,               made               a               copy,               and               turned               the               original               over               to               the               FBI.


                   
                   Reno               Evening               Gazette               employees               that               might               have               touched               the               letter               were               fingerprinted               by               the               FBI.
                   Gossett's               fourth               wife               Marilyn               told               Cook               that               during               1971               Gossett               had               marital               and               financial               problems               along               with               custody               issues               with               his               children               as               well               as               dissatisfaction               with               his               position               with               the               U.S.

    Army               as               a               sergeant               stationed               in               Utah.


                   
                   Letter               2
                   A               second,               hand-written               letter               signed               "D.B.

    Cooper"               was               sent               to               the               Vancouver               Province,               British               Columbia's               largest               newspaper,               between               November               30               and               December               2.

    It               made               an               odd               claim               that               the               first               composite               drawing               of               the               Cooper               suspect               "did               not               represent               the               truth."               The               letter               was               mailed               from               Vancouver.

    Additionally,               the               note               read:
                   I               enjoyed               the               "Grey               Cup"               game.
                   Am               leaving               Vancouver.
                   Thanks               for               the               hospitality.
                   D.B.

    Cooper
                   Both               the               first               and               second               letters               used               the               words               "thanks               for               the               hospitality."               The               exact               terminology               used               with               that               phrase               provides               a               possibility               that               both               writers               were               the               same               person.
                   The               59th               Grey               Cup,               crowning               the               champion               of               the               Canadian               Football               League,               was               played               November               28,               1971               in               Vancouver.

    Gossett               liked               football               and               had               a               cousin               who               played               in               the               NFL               as               a               kicker.
                   Cook               has               noted               that               Gossett's               family               members               were               aware               of               Gossett's               connections               with               British               Columbia               and               the               Vancouver               area.

    Speculation               has               surrounded               whether               Gossett               was               using               Vancouver               banks               to               store               money               in               safety               deposit               boxes               during               his               lifetime.

    Additionally,               why               would               a               hoaxer               claim               that               the               composite               sketch               was               not               accurate?

    Is               it               possible               that               the               real               D.B.

    Cooper               might               be               taunting               the               FBI               and               saying,               "Not               only               can't               you               catch               me,               you               are               unable               to               sketch               my               face               accurately"?
                   Two               sketches               of               the               D.B.

    Cooper               suspect               were               rendered               by               FBI               sketch               artists.

    When               the               second               sketch               was               done,               known               as               composite               B,               witnesses               involved               in               the               skyjacking               agreed               that               it               was               the               more               accurate               of               the               two.

    Composite               B               was               rendered               by               an               official               FBI               sketch               artist,               Mr.

    Rose,               several               months               after               the               skyjacking.

    He               received               information               from               four               material               witnesses               to               Cooper.

    The               letter               had               to               be               referring               to               composite               sketch               A.
                   Gossett's               son               Greg               told               Galen               Cook               that               his               father               was               vain               about               his               appearance.

    If               the               FBI               did               not               initially               get               his               appearance               correct,               he               might               find               it               irritating.

    Greg               said               his               father               kept               the               rendering               from               composite               #2               and               showed               it               to               him               in               1986               saying               that               they               finally               got               it               right.
                   Additionally,               William               Mitchell,               a               passenger               on               the               skyjacked               plane,               sat               in               the               same               aisle               as               D.B.

    Cooper               (18               B).

    He               told               Galen               Cook               that               D.B.

    Cooper               sat               in               18               E               (the               same               seat               Cooper               left               his               tie),               and               that               the               suspect               he               saw               bore               no               resemblance               to               a               photo               of               suspect               Ken               Christiansen,               who               was               the               sole               subject               of               the               History               Channel's               January               broadcast               of               the               show               DeCoded.
                   On               Mitchell's               testimony               concerning               the               suspect's               appearance,               Cook               said,               "His               report               to               the               FBI               was               crucial,               with               one               fine               detail               about               D.B.

    Cooper               that               was               never               released               by               the               FBI               to               the               public.

    I               met               personally               with               Mr.

    Mitchell               and               he               told               me               what               that               'detail'               was.

    The               FBI               confirmed               it               to               me.

    That               detail               comports               exactly               to               Gossett's               distinct               physical               characteristic."
                   As               you               can               see               in               the               sketch               and               comparison               to               Gossett's               photo               presented               above               this               article,               the               resemblance               is               striking               between               Gossett               and               the               D.B.

    Cooper               sketch,               composite               B.
                   Galen               Cook               was               given               an               8               mm               film               shot               in               August               of               1973               of               William               Gossett               only               days               after               Gossett's               retirement               from               the               U.S.

    Army               at               Fort               Lewis,               Washington.

    The               film               was               shot               by               one               of               his               sons               and               includes               scenes               of               ferries               sailing               from               Vancouver               to               Victoria.

    Cook               was               told               that               the               two               Gossetts               spent               two               days               in               the               Vancouver               area               on               August               2               and               3               where               William               Gossett               carried               two               briefcases               and               left               his               son               in               a               motel               for               two               hours               while               he               left               for               "business."               Gossett's               son               told               Cook               that               William               Gossett               was               reluctant               to               be               photographed               during               their               trip               to               Canada.

    Cook               was               able               to               secure               a               copy               of               the               film,               and               it               clearly               shows               a               nervous               William               Gossett               on               a               ferry.

    The               film               can               be               seen               in               a               link               under               "Sources"               at               the               end               of               this               article.
                   Letter               3               
                   
    A               third,               cut-and-paste               letter,               mailed               from               Oregon,               was               directed               to               the               Portland               Oregonian               and               mailed               December               1               from               a               zip               code               that               starts               with               "970,"               which               is               one               of               the               Oregon               zip               codes               but               not               Portland.

    It               read:
                   Am               alive               and               doing               well               in               hometown.

    P.O.
                   The               system               that               beats               the               system.
                   D.B.

    Cooper
                   The               Portland               Oregonian               never               published               or               commented               on               the               letter.

    Though               the               Oregonian               never               published               it,               for               some               reason               the               Billings,               Montana               Gazette               did               publish               it               on               December               3,               1971               on               page               38.

    On               August               1,               2011,               the               FBI               published               a               black               and               white               version               of               the               letter               online.
                   A               picture               of               the               entire               letter               can               been               seen               at               a               link               under               Sources               of               this               article.
                   Was               D.B.

    Cooper               returning               to               the               place               of               his               crime?

    Gossett               ended               up               living               on               the               Oregon               coast               for               many               years               toward               the               end               of               his               life.

    What               the               "P.O."               means               is               unknown,               though               Portland,               Oregon               is               an               obvious               guess,               or               Port               Orford,               Oregon.

    Portland               was               where               D.B.

    Cooper               boarded               the               skyjacked               plane.

    Cook               speculates               that               the               P.O.

    could               refer               to               "Post               Office."               "D.B.

    Cooper               wanted               to               create               an               aura               that               he               was               mobile,               and               to               give               a               much               broader               range               of               possibilities               as               to               where               he               was               from,"               says               Cook.

    Gossett               relatives               told               Cook               that               Gossett               used               Post               Office               box               addresses               frequently               around               Salt               Lake               City               in               the               1970s               and               1980s.
                   On               September               8,               2011,               on               the               DB               Cooper               forum               "DropZone,"               there               was               a               posting               from               a               "DBCooperDecoded"               who               asked               for               people               to               comment               on               letter               3.

    This               is               the               same               email               address               for               an               anonymous               person               "Al               Di"               who               established               a               web               site               and               video               concerning               letter               3               (dbcooperdecoded.com).

    A               video               analyzing               this               letter,               linked               within               the               Al               Di               web               site,               was               posted               on               YouTube               Aug.

    16,               2011               ("New               D.B.

    Cooper               Letter               Reveals               Intriguing               New               Insights").

    The               anonymous               video               creator               claims               that               all               of               the               pasted               letters               of               this               letter               were               cut               from               June               and               July,               1970               issues               of               Playboy               magazine.

    The               video               provides               analysis               of               the               letter               and               how               the               choice               of               letters               from               the               pages               of               the               magazine               reveal               additional               associations               to               the               hijacking               that               D.B.

    Cooper               wanted               to               show               authorities.

    The               link               to               this               video               can               be               found               in               the               Sources               section               of               this               article               or               at               dbcooperdecoded.com.
                   If               you               take               a               look               at               this               site               and               the               video,               you               will               see               that               a               lot               of               work               has               gone               into               the               analysis               of               this               single               letter.

    Is               this               the               work               of               an               amateur               sleuth               or               someone               with               special               knowledge               of               the               case?

    If               this               is               an               amateur               sleuth,               why               the               anonymity?
                   Al               Di's               web               site               details               his               opinions               on               the               letter               and               has               a               "Contact"               section               asking               for               name/email/comments.

    Though               I               have               inquired               through               the               "Contact"               section               about               Al               Di's               identity               and               source               of               material,               he               or               she               has               not               responded.
                   Galen               Cook               and               Al               Di               exchanged               emails               numerous               times               between               August               16,               2011               and               May               2012.

    The               entire               time               Al               Di               refused               to               reveal               his               identity               to               Cook.

    "I               went               back               and               reread               each               of               'Al               Di's'               emails               to               me,"               said               Cook.

    "He               probes               around               asking               for               information               about               Gossett,               makes               comments               that               the               FBI               'probably               has               more               unreleased               evidence               about               Norjak,'               kids               around               about               other               suspects,               and               asks               me               questions               about               my               publisher               and               whether               I               have               'other               evidence'               about               the               case               that               the               FBI               has               not               yet               seen."
                   Al               Di               claims               on               his               web               site               that               he               is               ".

    .

    .

    not               a               professional               researcher.

    Just               an               average               Joe               interested               in               the               mystery               of               D.B.

    Cooper."               However,               this               average               Joe               refuses               to               reveal               his               identity               or               source               of               information               to               Galen               Cook               or               anyone               else               it               seems.
                   Cook               speculates               that               the               FBI               has               other               unreleased               evidence               about               Norjak               and               that               Al               Di               could               be               an               active               or               retired               FBI               agent               trying               to               find               unreleased               information               about               Gossett               from               Cook               or               anyone               else               who               might               have               information.

    Cook               cites               a               similar               instance               when               FBI               agent               Larry               Carr               went               undercover               as               "CKRET"               at               the               Dropzone               website               with               the               expectation               of               getting               new               information.

    Is               Al               Di               another               sleeper               FBI               agent               fishing               for               Cooper               information?
                   Two               weeks               before               the               Cooper               skyjacking,               a               similar               skyjack               attempt               was               made               by               a               man               on               an               Air               Canada               flight               out               of               Calgary,               Alberta,               which               was               diverted               to               Great               Falls,               Montana.

    The               skyjacker,               Paul               Cini,               was               overcome               by               the               flight               crew               and               little               was               heard               about               this               incident               again.

    Did               the               FBI               link               this               failed               skyjacking               with               Cooper's?

    Did               they               believe               there               was               some               kind               of               connection?

    Would               the               appearance               of               the               Oregonian               letter               in               a               Montana               paper               have               anything               to               do               with               this               connection?

    FBI               agent               Ralph               Himmelsbach               stated               the               he               believed               Cooper               derived               part               of               his               plan               from               Cini's               botched               effort.
                   Curiously,               the               July               1970               issue               of               Playboy               has               a               short               story               entitled               "Last               Train               to               Limbo"               that               features               a               42-year-old               man               who               plots               his               disappearance               from               society               while               suffering               from               a               mid-life               crisis,               a               scenario               that               is               similar               to               the               state               of               affairs               of               Gossett               at               the               time.

    Did               D.

    B.

    Cooper               select               this               issue               to               provide               additional               clues               to               the               FBI?

    Did               Cooper               gather               inspiration               from               this               story               to               plot               his               disappearance               from               society               and               gather               retirement               funds?
                   Cook               says               about               the               Al               Di               situation               that               the               "The               FBI               is               definitely               curious               about               Gossett,               but               they               don't               want               me               or               other               people               to               know               that."
                   In               May               2011,               Galen               Cook               saw               the               envelope               of               this               letter               in               a               Seattle               FBI               field               office.

    He               believes               the               handwriting               on               the               envelope               is               similar               to               the               handwriting               of               Gossett.
                   The               envelope               reads               exactly:
                   Editor               -               Oregonian               
                   1320               S.W.

    Broadway               
                   97201
                   Letter               4
                   A               fourth               letter,               as               reported               by               the               December               3               article               in               the               Reno               Evening               Gazette,               was               mailed               December               1               from               US               Postal               Server               956,               in               the               Sacramento               area.

    The               letter               was               cancelled               in               Sacramento               but               could               have               been               mailed               "at               any               one               of               50               or               60               post               offices               in               the               Sacramento               area,"               which               included               the               town               where               the               first               letter               was               mailed:               Oakdale,               California.
                   The               Reno               Evening               Gazette               did               not               publish               the               letter,               as               they               had               been               warned               by               the               FBI               not               to               publish               it.

    However,               the               paper               did               write               a               short               article               on               Friday,               December               3,               1971,               mentioning               the               fourth               DB               Cooper               letter.
                   The               letter               was               again               a               paste               up               like               the               first               letter               that               read:
                   Plan               ahead               for               retirement               income               
                   D.B.

    Cooper
                   William               Gossett's               senior               commanding               officer               at               the               Weber               State               College               ROTC               unit               in               Ogden,               Utah               (Col.

    Knauer)               was               due               back               in               Ogden               on               Friday,               December               3,               1971,               after               having               spent               one               week               at               the               Presidio               in               California.

    The               regular               air               mode               of               travel               for               uniformed               officers               and               NCO's               in               1971               was               by               military               transport.

    There               was               an               established               military               transport               service               between               Ogden,               Utah               and               Sacramento               in               1971,               which               Gossett               was               known               to               have               used.
                   Gossett               would               retire               from               the               Army               less               than               two               years               later.

    [See               "Where               was               Gossett               Thanksgiving               Week               1971?"               below.]
                   In               all               four               letters,               there               is               a               complimentary,               explanatory,               and               taunting               tone.

    First,               a               compliment               to               all               involved:               Thanks               for               the               hospitality.

    Then               there               is               an               explanation:               I               was               in               a               rut               and               needed               retirement               income,               then               taunting               when               he               writes               I               enjoyed               a               football               game;               you               can't               draw               my               face;               you               can't               catch               me               even               though               I'm               telling               you               where               I               am;               I'm               in               Vancouver;               I'm               alive               and               back               where               it               all               started               (Portland);               I'm               the               system               that               beat               your               system.
                   Where               was               Gossett               Thanksgiving               Week               1971?
                   In               November               of               2011,               Galen               Cook               released               information               concerning               his               investigation               into               Weber               State               College's               attendance               records               for               ROTC               personnel.

    Cook               also               obtained               Gossett's               full               DD-214               military               file.

    Gossett               was               an               instructor               at               Weber               State               at               the               time               of               the               skyjacking               and               a               Desk               Sergeant               with               access               to               attendance               records.

    Was               Gossett               ever               seen               during               the               crucial               days               of               Thanksgiving               week               and               was               he               able               to               officially               cover               any               missing               time               he               might               have               had?

    This               is               a               key               question               concerning               Gossett's               possible               role               in               the               skyjacking,               and               Cook's               continued               investigation               provides               some               important               information               about               this               time               period.
                   Cook               says               he               consulted               three               sources               concerning               the               whereabouts               of               Gossett               in               November               of               1971:               the               U.S.

    Army               "duty               roster"               for               the               month               of               November               1971;               U.S.

    Army's               "morning               reports"               for               as               many               days               in               late               November,               early               December,               as               possible;               and               a               personal               interview               with               Gossett's               immediate               CO               (commanding               officer),               Major               Palletti.
                   Additionally,               he               extensively               interviewed               all               of               the               living               ROTC               staff               that               worked               with               Gossett               at               Weber               State               during               November               of               1971.
                   Cook               reports               that               "Gossett               appeared               on               the               duty               roster               for               the               months               of               November/December               1971,               but               this               can               be               misleading               because               those               rosters               only               provide               the               names               of               the               persons               who               are               'scheduled'               to               be               working               at               the               Weber               ROTC               unit.

    They               do               not               show               who               might               not               have               shown               up               for               work.

    The               DR               shows               four               commissioned               officers               and               three               NCO's,               which               included               Gossett.

    This               was               the               full               complement               of               the               ROTC               staff."
                   The               "morning               reports"               for               November               28,               1971               document               that               ROTC               Col.

    Knauer               (Professor               of               Military               Science)               was               to               leave               on               that               date               and               go               to               the               Presidio               in               San               Francisco               for               a               week's               worth               of               military-related               work.

    On               Friday,               December               3,               a               new               NCO,               Sgt.

    Dumling,               was               assigned               to               the               ROTC               unit               to               take               Gossett's               position.

    Gossett               would               remain               with               the               unit               due               to               his               approaching               retirement.

    Col.

    Knauer's               second               in               command,               Maj.

    Palletti,               was               more               relaxed               and               Gossett's               best               friend               at               the               unit.
                   Cook               reports               that               Palletti               told               him               that               "with               Knauer               gone               for               the               week               starting               Monday,               November               29,               and               Dumling               coming               in               the               following               Friday,               there               wasn't               much               for               Gossett               to               do."               Additionally,               Maj.

    Palletti               told               Cook               "that               Gossett               didn't               do               that               much               anyway.

    Gossett               was               the               first               NCO               (E-7)               to               arrive               at               Weber               and               he               helped               Maj.

    Palletti               establish               the               entire               ROTC               unit               in               April               1971."
                   It               is               Maj.

    Palletti's               opinion               that               Gossett               could               have               easily               taken               off               from               Weber               after               work               on               Tuesday,               November               23               and               been               gone               until               Thursday               or               Friday               of               the               following               week.

    "With               Col.

    Knauer               gone,"               said               Cook,               "and               Sgt.

    Dumling               not               due               to               arrive               until               Friday               Dec.

    3,               Gossett               had               little               to               do               at               the               unit               that               week,               according               to               Palletti.

    He               wouldn't               have               even               needed               to               fill               out               a               'leave'               form,               as               long               as               he               was               back               by               Friday,               Dec.

    3.

    Moreover,               Gossett               was               the               desk               sergeant               and               he               would               be               in               a               position               to               alter               any               material               records               involving               official               leave."
                   When               this               information               is               placed               in               conjunction               with               the               timeline               of               the               letters,               Cook               says,               "The               first               letter               was               sent               out               on               Saturday,               November               27th               from               California.

    The               last               letter               was               sent               from               California               probably               on               Wednesday,               December               1st.

    There               were               no               more               DB               Cooper               letters               after               that,               because               Gossett               returned               to               Utah               by               Thursday,               December               2,               and               he               didn't               want               to               give               his               position               away               on               the               cancelled               envelope."
                   Investigating               the               Letters
                   Phone               calls               by               Galen               Cook               in               January               of               2011               to               retired               FBI               agents               revealed               that               all               of               the               letters               were               confiscated               by               the               FBI               in               1971.

    A               retired               FBI               agent               who               worked               the               case               in               Portland,               Oregon               in               1971               told               Cook               that               the               "source               of               the               letters               was               never               identified,"               and               that               the               letters               are               in               some               FBI               vault.

    A               retired               FBI               profiler               told               Cook               that               the               "letter               writer               needed               attention,"               and               that               the               D.B.

    Cooper               skyjacking               was               "a               source               of               embarrassment               to               the               Bureau."               Cook's               conversations               with               the               retired               FBI               agents               found               that               one               of               the               prime               FBI               investigators               of               the               skyjacking,               Ralph               Himmelsbach               remembers               the               letters               but               the               FBI               was               never               able               to               identify               who               mailed               them.

    Cook               is               determined               to               find               the               letters               and               investigate               them.
                   Cook               speculates               that               D.B.

    Cooper               might               have               returned               to               familiar               surroundings               in               the               Merced               and               Modesto,               California               area               following               the               hijacking.

    To               create               false               clues               and               trails,               he               might               have               written               these               letters               to               confuse               the               FBI               before               he               returned               to               his               home               in               Ogden,               Utah               after               a               Thanksgiving               break.

    Moving               from               Merced               north               to               Modesto               it               would               be               easy               to               drop               off               the               first               letter               in               the               small               town               in               Oakdale               and               then               travel               north               to               an               airport               and               fly               to               Vancouver               via               Sacramento.

    In               Vancouver,               he               might               have               dropped               off               money               for               later               retrieval.
                   A               thorough               search               of               back               issues               of               the               Portland               Oregonian               by               Galen               Cook               demonstrated               that               there               was               no               article               referring               to               the               fact               that               they               received               letters               from               Cooper.

    It               appears               all               the               more               likely               that               the               Province               and               Oregonian               turned               over               their               letters               to               the               FBI               and               only               the               Reno               Evening               Gazette               wrote               about               them.
                   Cook               was               told               by               an               FBI               agent               that               the               public               was               probably               told               that               D.B.

    Cooper               died               in               the               jump               in               hopes               of               drawing               him               out               of               hiding.

    Does               this               mean               that               the               FBI               believed               the               hijacker               got               away               all               the               time               but               just               could               not               admit               it?
                   To               create               false               clues               and               trails,               did               Gossett               author               these               letters               to               confuse               the               FBI               before               he               returned               to               his               home               in               Ogden,               Utah               after               a               Thanksgiving               break?

    Moving               from               Merced               north               to               Modesto               it               would               be               easy               to               post               the               first               letter               in               the               small               town               in               Oakdale               and               then               travel               north               to               an               airport               and               fly               to               Vancouver               via               Sacramento               or               similar               airport.

    In               Vancouver,               he               might               have               secured               the               ransom               money               for               later               retrieval.
                   Did               Gossett               pen               all               or               some               of               the               letters               to               create               a               confusing               trail               before               returning               to               Ogden?
                   What               is               known               for               certain               is               that               Gossett               had               connections               and               associations               with               each               of               the               locations               where               the               letters               originated.
                   Where               has               the               FBI               been               in               investigating               these               letters               that               were               clearly               referred               to               in               three               separate               articles               in               the               Reno               Evening               Gazette               only               days               after               the               hijacking               some               39               years               ago?
                   By               Galen               Cook               bringing               the               issue               of               the               D.B.

    Cooper               letters               to               the               public               once               again,               it               appears               the               FBI               agent               in               charge               of               Norjak               is               looking               into               finding               these               letters               and               reassessing               their               value.
                   The               investigation               into               the               significance               and               authenticity               of               the               letters               continues.
                   Envelopes               and               Letter               Sent               to               Portland               Oregonian               Revealed               by               FBI               Office
                   In               May               of               2011,               a               Norjak               case               agent               showed               Cook               two               envelopes               that               might               be               linked               to               the               Cooper               case.

    Each               was               sent               to               the               Portland               Oregonian               newspaper,               one               dated               December               1,               1971               and               the               other               December               3,               1971.

    They               were               on               file               in               the               Seattle               Field               Offices               of               the               FBI.
                   Though               one               of               the               original               FBI               case               officers,               Ralph               Himmelsbach,               told               a               Portland               Oregonian               reporter               that               the               Oregonian               never               received               any               letters               from               D.B.

    Cooper,               the               evidence               in               the               Seattle               FBI               office               would               seem               to               contradict               that               belief.
                   Cook               believes               the               December               3,               1971               envelope               and               letter               he               saw               was               a               hoax.
                   However,               the               December               1st               envelope               "showed               some               resemblance               to               Bill               Gossett's               hand               printing,"               according               to               Cook.

    The               envelope               contained               double               the               postage               necessary.
                   Possibility               of               Eye-witness               Revealed
                   Galen               Cook               learned               of               a               possible               eyewitness               to               the               Cooper               parachuting               in               2009               and               revealed               his               information               to               the               Standard-Examiner               that               published               that               information               May               22,               2010.

    His               friend               and               fellow               investigator               into               the               case,               Richard               Tosaw,               interviewed               a               woman               in               1985               that               claimed               she               saw               Cooper               jump               from               the               hijacked               jet.

    Upon               the               death               of               Tosaw,               a               former               FBI               agent               and               California               attorney,               Cook               was               able               to               review               some               of               Tosaw's               documents               and               writings               on               the               Cooper               case.
                   "Nowhere,               in               any               records               that               I               have               found,               is               there               any               reference               to               an               eye-witness               to               the               Cooper               jump.

    Yet,               there               she               was.

    There               is               something               very               credible               and               compelling               about               her               story,"               Cook               told               Standard-Examiner               reporter               Scott               Schwebke.
                   The               eye-witness               was               interviewed               in               May               of               2010               by               the               Standard-Examiner.

    She               has               requested               that               her               last               name               be               withheld.

    A               picture               of               Janet               now               appears               with               the               May               2010               Standard-Examiner               story.
                   She               told               the               Standard-Examiner               that               she               was               in               the               passenger               seat               of               a               car               on               the               night               of               the               skyjacking               on               the               way               to               the               Key               Hotel               near               Vancouver,               Washington.

    She               saw               a               jet               with               a               fireball               arch               from               its               tail               and               split               into               two.

    The               streak               of               fire               disappeared               in               the               direction               of               the               Columbia               River.
                   Cook               has               theorized               that               the               fireball               was               Gossett               throwing               road               flares               from               the               jet               to               judge               wind               direction.

    The               road               flares               were               probably               shown               as               part               of               a               bomb               package               to               threaten               the               flight               attendants.
                   A               Continental               Airlines               727               jet               traveling               from               Seattle               to               Portland               trailed               the               Cooper               plane               by               a               few               minutes.

    Just               before               the               Continental               flight               landed               at               Portland,               the               pilot               reported               60-knot               aloft               winds               from               the               south-east               at               about               168               degrees.

    While               the               ground-speed               winds               at               the               Portland               airport               were               relatively               low,               the               Continental               pilot               reported               the               winds               aloft               at               a               considerably               faster               speed.

    Cook               checked               with               NOAA               weather               charts,               weather               balloon               releases,               National               Weather               Service,               and               pilot's               back-up               reports               to               confirm               this               information,               and               believes               the               flares               were               used               by               Cooper               to               check               the               wind               directions               before               he               made               his               jump.
                   Knowing               the               aloft               wind               speeds               are               crucial               in               understanding               the               possible               direction               the               parachutist               would               have               taken.

    The               60-knot,               aloft               winds               could               carry               a               parachutist               in               a               north-north-west               direction.

    "A               pilot's               report               is               crucial               to               the               case,"               concludes               Cook,               "and               the               FBI               never               used               it               for               back-up.

    That's               why               they               spent               all               of               their               time               looking               in               the               wrong               area."
                   Cook               reports               that               Gossett               kept               road               flares               at               his               house.

    Gossett's               son               Greg               told               Cook,               "My               father               had               an               obsession               with               road               flares.

    He               used               to               light               them               off               for               me               when               I               was               a               kid.

    There               were               tons               of               them               around               our               house               growing               up."
                   Cook               researched               Janet's               claim               to               have               seen               the               jet               from               her               house.

    He               told               the               Standard-Examiner               that               a               radar               map               has               confirmed               the               fact               that               the               hijacked               jet               had               passed               over               Janet's               house.

    The               direction               of               the               fireball               she               saw               was               in               alignment               with               the               riverbank               where               some               of               the               ransom               money               was               discovered.
                   Janet               told               Cook               that               eight               or               nine               days               after               she               contacted               the               FBI               two               men               identifying               themselves               as               government               officials               came               to               her               door               and               told               her               not               to               speak               about               what               she               saw.

    Cook               believes               Cooper               landed               very               close               to               the               city               limits               of               Portland               and               in               the               correct               flight               path               that               Janet               witnessed.

    The               FBI               was               searching               some               35               miles               away               in               the               wrong               location.
                   Cook               told               the               Standard-Examiner,               "Her               report               could               change               the               course               and               the               scope               of               the               case,               and               in               part,               answer               some               of               the               more               intriguing               questions."               [Schwebke,               Scott.

    "D.B.

    Cooper               mystery               --               Did               witness               see               hijacker's               parachute?"               Standard-Examiner,               May               22,               2010,               and               personal               correspondence               with               Galen               Cook.]
                   Dan               Cooper               and               the               French               Connection
                   In               March               of               2009,               the               FBI               proposed               a               theory               concerning               the               origin               of               the               hijacker's               name               "Dan               Cooper."               In               the               1960's,               a               French               comic               book               series               by               Albert               Weinberg               featured               a               Royal               Canadian               test               pilot               who               was               involved               in               parachuting               from               planes               and               other               military               style               adventures.

    A               cover               of               one               of               the               comics               featured               Cooper               parachuting.

    The               name               Dan               Cooper               was               the               name               the               hijacker               used               when               he               purchased               his               one               way               ticket               to               Seattle.

    The               media               incorrectly               reported               the               name               as               "D.B.

    Cooper,"               and               the               name               has               stuck.
                   FBI               Agent               Larry               Carr               has               officially               theorized               that               the               skyjacker               Cooper               served               in               the               Air               Force               in               Europe,               became               interested               in               the               Cooper               comic               books,               worked               as               a               cargo               loader               on               planes,               and               wore               an               emergency               parachute               when               working               with               flying               cargo               planes.

    [FBI               Home               Page               link               under               Sources]
                   Galen               Cook               told               talk               show               host               Ian               Punnett               on               March               21,               2009               that               he               has               read               Gossett's               military               record               and               discovered               that               Gossett,               an               accomplished               Army               parachutist,               was               stationed               in               France               in               the               mid-1960s               and               could               read               and               write               French.


                   
    Gossett               was               stationed               for               several               months               at               Brienne               la               Chateau,               France,               at               an               Army               aircraft               field               maintenance               center.
                   Carol               Abraczinskas,               a               University               of               Chicago               scientific               illustrator,               is               part               of               a               D.B.

    Cooper               Research               Team.

    Along               with               Tom               Kaye,               a               paleontologist               at               Seattle's               Burke               Museum               of               Natural               History               and               Culture,               and               Illinois-based               metallurgical               engineer               Alan               Stone,               the               team               is               investigating               the               significance               of               the               French               comic,               "Dan               Cooper"               and               related               D.B.

    Cooper               issues.
                   The               comic               was               published               only               in               French.

    A               1963               issue               features               a               man               who               boards               an               airliner.

    Wearing               a               dark               suit               and               mask               over               his               eyes,               he               sits               in               the               back               of               the               plane,               demands               a               briefcase               to               be               brought               to               him               that               is               in               the               cockpit,               and               like               the               1971               version               of               D.B.

    Cooper               parachutes               from               the               plane               into               a               wooded               area               in               the               rain               at               night.
                   "I'm               looking               at               this               as,               are               these               comics               a               possible               blueprint               for               the               hijacker?"               Abraczinskas               said.
                   Tom               Kaye,               part               of               the               investigating               team,               told               KING-TV,               Seattle,               Nov.

    24,               2011               that               the               clip-on               tie               that               D.B.

    Cooper               wore               had               traces               of               titanium               on               it.

    The               metal               is               rare,               which               has               led               Kaye               to               believe               that               Cooper               might               have               been               part               of               a               Boeing               work               team.
                   "In               1971               there               was               a               big               upheaval               in               the               titanium               industry               with               the               cancelling               of               the               SST               project,               which               happened               to               be               at               Boeing,               and               that               laid               a               lot               of               people               off               in               the               industry.

    So               Cooper               could               have               been               part               of               the               fallout,"               Kaye               said.
                   Tina               Bar               Investigation
                   In               2009,               Galen               Cook               assembled               a               "science               team"               to               study               and               analyze               the               soils               near               the               1980               money               found               on               the               Columbia               River.

    The               team               consisted               of               a               set               of               applied               science               academics               who               work               in               the               fields               of               sedimentary               deposits,               shoreline               process,               and               soils               engineering.
                   In               January               of               2011,               Cook               reported               that               he               was               working               with               a               respected               scientist               from               Oregon               studying               the               effects               of               erosion,               shoreline               process,               and               saturation               effects               on               paper               currency               at               Tina               Bar,               the               site               of               discovery               of               $5,880               in               D.B.

    Cooper               bills               in               1980.

    Cook's               partner               in               this               scientific               study               has               over               25               years               of               experience               in               soils               and               shoreline               process               studies.

    The               money               was               not               found               in               a               remote               area               of               the               Columbia               River               but               on               a               public               beach               area               of               the               river               called               Tina               Bar.

    This               river               bar               was               accessible               to               anyone               who               wanted               to               access               the               river               for               recreational               purposes               in               the               1970s.
                   In               February               of               2012,               Cook               revealed               that               his               science               team               had               completed               their               three-year               analysis               of               the               1980               money               discovered               at               Tina               Bar               on               the               shore               line               of               Columbia               River.

    The               analysis               was               concluded               in               January               of               2012.

    His               analysis               started               in               the               spring               of               2008,               where               he               spent               many               hours               making               assessments               at               the               Lower               River               Road               location               near               the               old               Fazio               Farm               House.

    He               was               granted               permission               by               the               Fazio's               to               conduct               his               research               near               their               property.

    Later               that               summer,               Cook               utilized               the               expertise               of               a               respected               firm               from               the               Portland               area               that               specializes               in               soils               erosion,               shoreline               process,               and               hydrological               studies.

    "I               got               the               right               guys               to               work               with               me,"               said               Cook.
                   Cook               was               also               able               to               work               with               the               Norjak               case               agent               in               Seattle               and               obtain               a               copy               of               the               FBI's               1980               study               of               the               Cooper               money               find.

    "The               work               performed               by               Dr.

    Palmer               at               Tina               Bar,"               reported               Cook,               "was               valuable,               in               that               it               gave               a               scientific               analysis               of               the               stratified               soils               and               its               contents.

    This               produced               a               very               accurate               timeline               for               the               arrival               of               the               money               at               Tina               Bar.

    What               Dr.

    Palmer's               report               did               not               specify               was               how               the               money               arrived               and               what               caused               its               decomposed               condition."               Cook's               investigation               has               focused               on               these               crucial               questions.
                   "We               conducted               a               fairly               controlled               experiment               and               repeated               it               three               times               over               the               course               of               several               years.

    Part               of               the               experimentation               was               performed               on               site,               and               part               was               performed               in               a               lab.

    This               was               really               exciting               stuff,"               said               Cook.
                   Cook               is               holding               back               on               the               details               of               the               experiments,               because               the               senior               scientist               of               the               team               is               working               on               a               white               paper               that               he               will               present               to               peer               scientists.

    Cook               is               counting               on               these               science               results,               backed-up               by               Dr.

    Palmer's               1980               report,               and               specific               information               provided               to               him               by               a               witness,               to               show               that               the               Tina               Bar               money               did               not               drift               to               shore               by               the               river               current.
                   By               an               agreement               with               the               FBI,               Cook               cannot               release               the               details               of               Dr.

    Palmer's               1980               report.

    However,               Cook               can               reveal               that               according               to               Dr.

    Palmer               the               money               arrived               at               Tina               Bar               in               1979.
                   The               FBI               believes               the               money               floated               down               the               Washougle               River               close               to               Cooper's               drop,               which               they               believe               was               near               Arial               or               Woodland,               Washington.

    Eventually,               according               to               the               FBI,               the               money               was               deposited               on               the               banks               of               the               Columbia               some               18               miles               south               of               its               original               source.

    This               begs               the               question               of               how               three               stacks               of               bills               could               travel               that               distance               and               then               end               up               shallowly               buried               in               a               single               stack.
                   Cook's               investigation               into               the               money               has               been               aided               by               Phil               Scoles               of               Terra               Science               Inc.

    and               a               Lecturer               at               Wetland               Training               Institute               and               Portland               State               University.

    Cook               and               Scoles               conducted               various               experiments               within               four               different               soil               stratas               that               tested               how               the               money               would               react               to               the               soils,               water,               and               oxygen.
                   In               November               of               2013,               Cook               revealed               that               after               three               years               of               experiments,               the               money               found               on               the               Columbia               River               could               not               have               been               there               more               than               9               months.

    The               Cooper               money               was               in               fact               more               weathered               than               the               experimental               money.
                   Now               it               appears               that               two               studies               into               the               money               conclude               that               the               bills               found               were               not               in               the               elements               since               the               time               of               the               hijacking               (approximately               9               years)               but               in               the               elements               for               no               longer               than               a               year.
                   Did               Cooper               plant               the               money               as               a               diversionary               tactic               to               lead               the               FBI               into               thinking               he               had               not               survived?

    Did               he               weather               the               bills               before               burying               them               in               an               effort               to               make               it               look               like               the               bills               were               there               a               long               time?

    How               or               why               did               the               three               stacks               of               bills               end               up               stacked               upon               each               other?

    If               Cooper               didn't               survive               the               jump               and               the               hijack               money               got               into               the               Washougle               River,               where's               the               rest               of               the               $244,120?
                   The               Continuing               Investigation               --               Where               can               Technology               Take               Us               with               This               Case?
                   In               an               August               7,               2010               interview               with               radio               host               Ian               Punnett,               Cook               said               that               he               was               working               more               closely               than               ever               with               the               FBI               as               well               as               authorities               in               Canada               concerning               Gossett's               possible               link               to               the               Cooper               case.

    He               is               trying               to               uncover               any               of               Cooper's               money               that               may               have               been               deposited               in               Canadian               safety               deposit               boxes               by               Gossett.

    Cook               reminded               the               radio               audience               that               Gossett               is               the               only               major               suspect               of               the               Cooper               case               not               to               be               eliminated               by               the               FBI               as               the               possible               hijacker.

    Punnett               urged               listeners               to               examine               the               updated               article               on               the               case               in               the               Standard-Examiner,               which               was               updated               with               recent               information               concerning               the               "Janet"               eyewitness.

    [See               Schwebke,               Standard-Examiner               link               below               of               May               22,               2010]
                   In               January               of               2011,               Cook               said               he               is               working               closer               than               ever               with               the               FBI.

    He               is               seeking               admission               to               the               original               D.B.

    Cooper               letters.

    "What               I               would               like               to               do               is               have               DNA               samples               taken               from               several               letters               and               see               if               they               are               from               the               same               author.

    Then,               I               want               to               see               if               any               of               them               match               Gossett's               DNA."
                   Only               the               FBI               can               test               the               letters               for               DNA,               fingerprints,               handwriting               comparison,               and               report               the               results               to               the               public.

    Are               the               envelopes               the               same?

    Are               there               any               obvious               similarities               between               the               letters?

    Beyond               evidence               the               letters               might               reveal,               was               there               evidence               left               on               the               plane,               like               the               tie               and               cigarette               butts               the               skyjacker               was               known               to               have               smoked,               that               could               be               linked               to               Gossett               through               scientific               analysis?

    He               has               been               told               by               FBI               officials               that               they               are               holding               specific               evidence               that               has               not               been               released               to               the               public.
                   Cook               has               found               that               the               FBI               has               some               kind               of               DNA               from               the               skyjacker               but               the               quality               of               the               sample               may               be               questionable.

    He               has               been               told               that               the               FBI               needs               actual               fingerprints               from               Gossett,               not               photographic               copies.

    What               kind               of               fingerprint               evidence               the               FBI               has               obtained               from               the               skyjacker               has               not               been               revealed               publicly.

    Galen               Cook               provided               the               FBI               and               the               Department               of               Justice               a               full               set               of               original               fingerprints.
                   Galen               Cook               has               provided               DNA,               fingerprints,               military               records,               work               records,               other               documents,               confessions,               motives,               opportunities,               skills,               and               escape               routes               of               the               prime               suspect               to               the               FBI.
                   Throughout               the               years,               there               have               been               numerous               suspects               mentioned               with               this               infamous               crime               with               all               of               them               eliminated               by               the               FBI               with               evidence               they               have               kept               classified.

    Gossett               remains               the               only               major               suspect               not               eliminated               by               the               FBI.

    In               November               2010,               the               new               Norjak               case               agent               told               Galen               Cook               that               Gossett               remained               "a               viable               suspect."
                   Cook               was               told               by               the               FBI               in               June               of               2011               that               they               think               the               case               is               "unsolvable."               This               might               have               a               lot               to               do               with               the               limited               evidence               the               FBI               was               able               to               accumulate               from               the               skyjacked               plane.

    Cook               believes               that               the               only               reliable               evidence               might               be               the               fingerprints               on               a               magazine               that               the               skyjacker               touched               during               the               flight.

    Curiously,               William               P.

    Gossett               has               been               investigated               by               the               FBI               for               years               and               no               definitive               elimination               has               been               established               for               him               by               the               FBI.
                   Cook               is               investigating               numerous               aspects               of               the               case               and               is               working               with               the               Canadian               banking               system               in               trying               to               locate               a               safety               deposit               box               owned               by               Gossett,               which               could               contain               part               of               the               skyjacker's               ransom               money.

    Cook               is               working               with               Canadian               authorities               and               will               release               more               information               about               this               aspect               of               the               case               in               the               future               when               he               has               obtained               official               information               that               can               be               corroborated               by               Canadian               or               American               authorities.
                   Suspect               L.

    D.

    Cooper's               DNA               Does               Not               Match               FBI               Sample
                   August               3,               2011,               Marla               Cooper               told               ABC               News               that               her               uncle,               Lynn               Doyle               Cooper,               is               the               new               suspect               in               the               1971               D.B.

    Cooper               skyjacking               case.

    Marla               Cooper               is               a               previous               resident               of               Oregon               and               told               reporters               that               she               took               and               passed               a               five-and-a-half               hour               polygraph               test               given               by               the               FBI.
                   Marla               Cooper               was               eight-years-old               when               the               skyjacking               occurred.

    She               claims               that               two               of               her               uncles               were               conspirators               in               the               case,               and               one               uncle               known               to               the               family               as               "L.D.,"               was               the               man               who               jumped               from               the               plane.
                   On               August               5,               2011,               Marla               Cooper               said               that               "the               DNA               that               they               were               able               to               extract"               from               L.D.'s               daughter,               "did               not               match               the               the               partial               sample               of               DNA               that               they               have               in               their               files."               However,               the               question               of               the               reliability               of               the               DNA               that               the               FBI               procured               from               a               tie               and               tie               clip               left               on               the               plane,               is               and               has               been               in               question               for               years.
                   FBI               agent               Fred               Gutt               admits               that               the               sample               "is               not               very               good"               and               in               fact               may               not               be               the               skyjacker's               at               all.
                   Marla               Cooper               created               a               national               stir               about               the               case               when               she               told               ABC               and               CNN               News               that               before               Thanksgiving               of               1971,               "My               two               uncles,               who               I               only               saw               at               holiday               time,               were               planning               something               very               mischievous."               She               witnessed               them               before               the               skyjacking               working               with               "expensive               walkie               talkies"               and               planning               a               hunting               trip.
                   Ms.

    Cooper               says               she               remembers               that               her               two               uncles               showed               up               to               a               family               house               in               Sisters,               Oregon               in               the               early               morning               of               Thanksgiving,               the               day               after               the               skyjacking.

    L.D.

    was               bloodied               and               injured               claiming               he               was               in               an               accident.

    "My               uncle               L.

    D.

    was               wearing               a               white               T-shirt,               and               he               was               bloody               and               bruised               and               a               mess,               and               I               was               horrified.

    I               began               to               cry,"               she               said.
                   "I               heard               my               uncle               Dewy               say,               'We               did               it.

    Our               money               problems               are               over.

    We               just               have               to               go               back               and               get               the               money.

    L.D.

    hijacked               an               airplane,'               "               Marla               said.
                   Her               uncles               tried               to               convince               Marla's               father,               Don               Cooper,               into               joining               them               to               hunt               for               the               money,               which               her               father               refused               to               do.

    Her               father               was               angry               and               screamed               at               his               brothers               claiming               they               had               ruined               their               lives.

    Marla's               father               and               the               two               brothers               are               deceased.
                   As               to               why               her               uncle               L.D.

    would               choose               the               name               "Dan               Cooper"               when               purchasing               a               ticket,               Marla               recognized               how               using               the               name               would               be               self               incriminating.

    She               believes               that               L.D.

    suffered               from               post-traumatic               stress               related               to               his               experience               in               the               Korean               War,               and               the               skyjacking               was               a               misguided               and               poorly               planned               escapade               that               ended               up               in               L.D.'s               injuries               and               loss               of               the               money               during               the               jump               from               the               plane.

    The               similarity               of               the               name               on               the               ticket               and               her               father's               name               was               not               lost               to               Don               Cooper.
                   Questions               remain               legion               in               the               case               against               L.D.

    Cooper               as               the               legendary               skyjacker.

    Did               he               have               enough               paratrooping               experience               to               make               a               successful               landing?

    How               were               the               brothers               able               to               link               up               after               such               a               difficult               night               time               jump?

    How               were               they               able               to               return               to               Sisters,               Oregon               the               next               day               when               the               recognized               jump               zone               was               approximately               150               miles               northwest               of               Sisters               as               the               crow               flies?

    Did               the               Cooper               brothers               ever               recover               any               of               the               money?

    How               did               the               entire               Cooper               family               stay               silent               for               so               long               on               such               a               famous               incident               in               American               crime?

    Of               the               $5,800               dollars               found               on               the               banks               of               the               Columbia               River               at               Tina               Bar               in               1980,               where               is               the               rest               of               the               $194,200               in               twenty               dollar               bills?

    None               of               the               ransom               money               has               ever               been               reported               in               circulation               and               no               other               trace               of               the               skyjacker               or               any               other               ransom               money               has               ever               been               found               on               the               ground.
                   Marla               Cooper               has               stated               that               she               believed               L.

    D.

    Cooper               did               not               have               paratrooping               experience.

    He               had               an               interest               in               the               comic               book               Dan               Cooper,               which               he               kept               a               copy               tacked               to               a               wall.

    "Dan               Cooper"               is               the               name               the               skyjacker               used               when               purchasing               a               twenty-dollar,               one-way               ticket               from               Portland,               Oregon               to               Seattle,               Washington               on               November,               24,               1971.

    She               produced               a               color               photo               of               L.D.

    Cooper               for               ABC               News,               which               she               says               was               taken               in               1972.

    Though               the               photo               is               not               of               great               quality,               the               resemblance               of               L.D.

    to               the               FBI               sketches               of               D.B.

    Cooper               is               similar.

    She               did               not               see               L.D.

    after               1972.
                   It               is               believed               L.D.

    lived               in               the               Fruit               Valley               area               of               Vancouver,               Washington               in               1969-70               and               had               a               wife               named               Phyllis.

    Vancouver               is               across               the               border               of               Oregon               a               few               miles               from               the               Portland,               Oregon               airport               where               the               skyjacking               began.

    L.D.

    had               been               employed               as               an               engineering               surveyor,               and               his               brother,               Dewy               Max               Cooper,               was               employed               at               one               time               at               Boeing.

    The               men's               occupations               has               led               to               speculation               that               Lynn               was               able               to               scout               areas               in               Oregon               and               Washington               in               which               he               could               land,               and               Dewy's               work               at               Boeing               would               have               provided               knowledge               concerning               the               jet's               unique               aft               staircase               used               by               the               skyjacker               to               exit               the               plane.
                   L.D.

    Cooper               died               on               April               30,               1999               and               is               buried               in               Bend,               Oregon.

    He               served               in               the               Korean               War               with               the               U.S.

    Navy.

    Born               in               1931,               L.D.

    Cooper               would               have               been               forty-years               old               at               the               time               of               the               hijacking.
                   Appearing               on               the               Coast               to               Coast               radio               show               on               August               1,               2011               and               August               6,               2011,               Galen               Cook               said               he               became               aware               of               the               FBI's               interest               in               this               suspect               early               in               2011               while               sharing               information               with               an               FBI               agent               at               the               Seattle               field               office.
                   As               the               40th               anniversary               of               the               skyjacking               approaches               in               November,               2011,               questions               about               how               this               case               will               be               solved               is               no               further               along               than               it               was               in               November               of               1971:               Does               the               FBI               really               have               enough               evidence               to               convict               or               eliminate               suspects?

    Is               the               DNA               they               possess               from               the               famous               clip-on               tie               the               skyjacker's               or               is               it               DNA               from               another               source?

    Only               the               FBI               can               answer               these               questions               and               for               almost               40               years               there               have               been               no               definitive               answers.
                   November               26,               2011               Portland,               Oregon               Symposium
                   The               November               26,               2011               D.B.

    Cooper               symposium               held               in               Portland,               Oregon               addressed               numerous               issues               concerning               the               skyjacking.
                   Mark               Metzler,               an               expert               skydiver,               noted               that               Boeing               727s               have               been               used               by               the               CIA               to               drop               supplies               into               Thailand               with               the               aft               stairway               down.

    Boeing               documented               the               safety               of               flying               the               plane               with               the               aft               stairway               down.

    Metzler               also               said               that               Cooper's               selection               of               a               C-9               parachute               was               a               good               choice               that               allowed               a               parachutist               a               straight               drop               opposed               to               another               chute               that               might               allow               a               wayward               and               more               dangerous               landing.
                   Thomas               Kaye               emphasized               his               belief               that               it               was               more               likely               that               part               of               the               skyjacker's               money               found               by               Brian               Ingram               in               1980               on               the               Columbia               River               was               planted               after               the               skyjacking.

    The               path               of               the               plane               over               Toledo,               Ariel,               and               Highland,               Washington               was               far               from               the               Tina               Bar               location               on               the               Columbia               River               where               the               $5,800               of               ransom               money               was               found.

    "I               believe               he               did               survive,"               Ingram               said               at               the               symposium.

    "I               gave               the               man               a               lot               of               credit.

    I               feel               it               (the               cash)               didn't               get               there               by               natural               means."
                   Marla               Cooper,               who               believes               her               uncle               L.D.

    Cooper               was               the               skyjacker,               said               that               the               FBI               would               release               more               information               about               fingerprint               evidence,               and               how               it               relates               to               her               uncle,               in               spring               of               2012.

    [Hammond               and               Bernton]               
                   
                   Synopsis               of               circumstantial               evidence               that               William               P.

    Gossett               was               D.B               Cooper
                   At               the               time               of               the               skyjacking,               Gossett               was               41               years               old,               5'               10",               185               pounds               with               brown               eyes               and               short,               dark               hair               parted               on               the               left.

    [The               skyjacker               was               officially               described               by               the               FBI               as               white,               male,               mid-40's,               5'               10"               to               6',               170-180               pounds,               and               possibly               brown               eyes.

    He               was               average               to               well               built,               olive               complexion,               dark               hair               parted               on               the               left               and               combed               back.

    He               spoke               with               no               discernible               accent.

    The               suspect               smoked               8-10               Raleigh               filtered               cigarettes,               wore               a               black               suit,               white               shirt,               black               tie,               black               overcoat,               brown               shoes,               and               carried               a               dark               briefcase               and               paper               bag               4"               x               12"               x               14".]
                   Flight               attendant               Florence               Shaffner               said               pictures               of               Gossett               looked               similar               to               Cooper.
                   A               picture               of               Gossett               taken               in               the               early               1970s               is               similar               to               the               second               suspect               sketch               (composite               B)               released               by               the               FBI.
                   Gossett               drank               bourbon               and               smoked               cigarettes               like               Cooper.
                   Gossett               had               paratrooping               experience               as               both               a               Marine               and               member               of               the               U.S.

    Army.

    He               had               low               elevation               and               night               paratrooping               experience               as               well.
                   Gossett               traveled               to               Canada               as               part               of               his               job               with               the               Army.

    He               was               familiar               with               the               Vancouver,               Canada               area               where               the               second               D.B               Cooper               letter               was               mailed               and               received               by               the               Vancouver               Province               between               11/30/71               and               12/2/71.
                   Gossett's               commanding               officer               at               Weber               State               College,               Maj.

    Palletti,               said               that               Gossett               could               have               been               gone               from               his               job               before               and               after               Thanksgiving               1971.
                   Gossett               told               three               of               his               sons               and               his               attorney               that               he               was               D.B.

    Cooper               many               years               after               the               skyjacking.

    Numerous               Gossett               family               members               have               said               they               believed               that               Gossett               was               either               D.B.

    Cooper               or               had               the               ability               to               execute               the               risky               jump               and               survive.

    Gossett               often               spoke               of               the               D.B.

    Cooper               case               with               relatives               and               kept               numerous               files               on               the               skyjacking.
                   Cooper               told               flight               attendant               Florence               Shaffner               when               queried               as               to               why               he               was               skyjacking               the               plane               that               "he               had               a               grudge."               Marilyn               Smith,               one               of               Gossett's               wives,               said               he               was               dissatisfied               with               his               position               in               the               Army               at               the               time               of               the               skyjacking.

    Additionally,               he               had               marital               and               financial               problems               along               with               custody               battles               for               his               children.

    The               first               Cooper               letter               has               the               line               "was               in               a               rut."               Family               members               say               he               did               not               receive               a               promotion               from               the               Army               in               the               early               1970's               and               might               have               had               a               gambling               problem.
                   Gossett               showed               one               of               his               sons               wads               of               cash               during               Christmas               of               1971.

    A               niece               has               referred               to               seeing               her               uncle               with               large               amounts               of               cash               at               the               same               Christmas.
                   Gossett               was               stationed               in               Brienne               la               Chateau,               France               in               the               1960s               during               the               time               that               a               Belgian-produced               comic               written               in               French               was               available.

    The               comic               book,               Dan               Cooper,               had               plots               similar               to               the               skyjacking               performed               by               Cooper               on               November               24,               1971.

    The               comic               was               not               available               in               the               U.S.

    but               it               was               in               Canada.

    The               skyjacker               gave               his               name               to               the               airline               as               "Dan               Cooper."               Gossett               could               read               and               write               French.
                   Gossett               traveled               with               his               son               to               Vancouver,               Canada               in               August               of               1973               just               days               after               his               retirement               from               the               Army               at               Ft.

    Lewis,               Washington.

    He               later               told               his               son               that               the               ransom               money               was               stored               in               a               safety               deposit               box               in               Vancouver.

    A               letter               signed               D.B               Cooper               was               mailed               from               Vancouver               shortly               after               the               skyjacking.

    The               fourth               D.B               Cooper               letter               mailed               to               the               Reno               Evening               Gazette               on               12/1/71               referred               to               "planning               for               retirement."
                   Gossett               lived               and               worked               at               one               time               in               Merced,               California               just               forty               miles               south               of               Oakdale,               Ca.,               the               location               of               the               posting               of               the               first               D.B.

    Cooper               letter               mailed               to               Reno               on               11/27/71.
                   Gossett               lived               the               last               years               of               his               life               in               the               Portland,               Oregon               area,               which               was               the               origin               of               the               skyjacked               plane               and               the               vicinity               of               the               drop               zone               of               the               skyjacker.
                   A               1978               marriage               proposal               to               Gossett's               fifth               wife               was               written               on               MGM               Grand               Reno               stationery.

    Two               of               the               four               Cooper               letters               covered               here               were               mailed               to               the               Reno               Evening               Gazette               newspaper.

    When               told               by               the               flight               crew               that               the               jet               would               have               to               refuel               before               going               to               Mexico,               Cooper               suggested               they               land               in               Reno.

    They               did               land               in               Reno               but               without               Cooper.

    According               to               one               of               Gossett's               wives,               Gossett               spent               a               lot               of               time               in               Reno,               Nevada               never               knowing               exactly               what               he               was               doing               there.
                   Links               to               Information               Concerning               Major               Suspects
                   ABC               News               video,               Aug.

    3,               2011               on               L.D.

    Cooper
                   http://abcnews.go.com/WNT/video/hijacker-jumps-plane-lives-14226736
                   New               York               Times,               Aug.

    3,               2011               on               L.D.

    Cooper
                   http://www.nytimes.com/2011/08/04/us/04cooper.html
                   Craig,               John               S.

    D.B.

    Cooper               Suspect               Named:               Lynn               Doyle               Cooper,               http://www.associatedcontent.com/article/8284755/db_cooper_suspect_named_lynn_doyle.html?cat=37
                   Seattle               Times               article               on               July               2011               Suspect               http://www.seattlepi.com/local/article/FBI-checking-our-most-promising-lead-in-D-B-1666409.php
                   The               Telegraph,               July               30,               2011
                   http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/8667855/The-40-year-mystery-of-Americas-greatest-skyjacking.html
                   Richard               McCoy               and               Duane               Weber
                   http://www.usnews.com/usnews/doubleissue/mysteries/cooper.htm
                   http://www.masterliness.com/a/D.B.Cooper.htm
                   http://www.damninteresting.com/lames/the-legend-of-db-cooper
                   Kenneth               Christiansen
                   http://www.seattlepi.com/local/337121_dbcooper27.html
                   http://nymag.com/news/features/39593/
                   http://blog.sherlockinvestigations.com/2010/04/into-blast-true-story-of-db-cooper.html
                   Overview               of               Suspects:               List,               McCoy,               Mayfield,               Christiansen,               Gossett,               Weber
                   http://n467us.com/I%20Am%20D%20B%20Cooper.html
                   D.B.

    Cooper               on               Facebook
                   http://www.facebook.com/home.php#!/pages/DB-Cooper/10001004301
                   The               suspect               was               officially               described               by               the               FBI               as               white,               male,               mid-40's,               5'               10"               to               6',               170-180               pounds,               and               possibly               brown               eyes.

    He               was               average               to               well               built,               olive               complexion,               dark               hair               parted               on               the               left               and               combed               back.

    He               spoke               with               no               discernable               accent.

    The               suspect               smoked               8-10               Raleigh               filtered               cigarettes,               wore               a               black               suit,               white               shirt,               black               tie,               black               overcoat,               brown               shoes,               and               carried               a               dark               briefcase               and               paper               bag               4"               x               12"               x               14".
                   Sources
                   Picture               of               Letter               3:
                   http://photos.oregonlive.com/oregonian/2011/08/d_b_cooper_new_lead_3.html
                   YouTube               Video               Analysis               of               Letter               3:
                   http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tcq305ozsUI
                   The               Mountain               News,               Pictures               of               Tina               Mucklow,               The               Primary               Witness               to               the               D.B.

    Cooper               Skyjacking,               August               4,               2011,               http://themountainnewswa.net/2011/08/04/pictures-of-tina-mucklow-the-primary-witness-to-the-db-cooper-skyjacking/#more-2686
                   Alex               Stout               documentary               "The               Cooper               Identity               --               Who               is               the               Real               D.B.

    Cooper?"               http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7tRGP7t1U6s&feature=player_embedded
                   Hannaford,               Alex.

    The               Telegraph.

    July               30,               2011.
                   http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/8667855/The-40-year-mystery-of-Americas-greatest-skyjacking.html
                   
                   Seattle               Times               article               on               July               2011               Suspect               http://www.seattlepi.com/local/article/FBI-checking-our-most-promising-lead-in-D-B-1666409.php
                   1971               D.B.

    Cooper               Letters               Linked               to               Suspect               William               Gossett
                   http://               voices.yahoo.com               /article/6174770/1971_db_cooper_letters_linked_to_suspect.html
                   Beasley,               Rick.

    "Investigator               Claims               Depoe               Bay               Man               was               D.B.

    Cooper,"               Depoe               Bay               Beacon,               May               28,               2008.
                   "Letter               to               Gazette               Checked               in               FBI               Hunt               for               Skyjacker,"               Reno               Evening               Gazette,               Nov.

    29,               1971.
                   "Words               in               'Skyjacker               Note'               to               Gazette               Clipped               from               Modesto               Bee,               FBI               Told,"               Reno               Evening               Gazette,               Nov,               30,               1971.
                   "Gazette               Receives               Hijacker               'Letter'               --               Second               in               a               Week,"               Reno               Evening               Gazette,               Dec.

    3,               1971.
                   Personal               correspondence               with               Galen               Cook.
                   Standard               Examiner:               http://www.standard.net/topics/crime/2009/11/24/38-years-later-db-cooper-remains-mystery
                   Schwebke,               Scott.

    "D.B.

    Cooper               mystery               --               Did               witness               see               hijacker's               parachute?"               Standard-Examiner,               May               22,               2010.

    http://www.standard.net/topics/crime/2010/05/22/db-cooper-mystery-did-witness-see-hijackers-parachute
                   Tilkin,               Dan.

    KATU               video,               Portland,               Oregon.

    July               31,               2008.
                   FBI               page:
                   http://www.fbi.gov/page2/dec07/dbcooper123107.html
                   Set               of               pictures               and               documents               showing               Cooper               tie,               boarding               pass,               ransom               money               found,               parachutes               left               on               plane,               notes               by               flight               crew,               pictures               of               crew               and               aircraft,               maps               of               area:
                   http://n467us.com/Photo%20Evidence.htm#Money_Sand
                   Coast               to               Coast               link               to               a               Gossett               family               8               mm               silent               film               of               Gossett               in               1973               and               comparisons               of               Gossett               photos               with               Cooper               sketches:
                   http://www.coasttocoastam.com/shows/2008/03/29.html
                   Pertinent               video               material               on               Cooper               case:
                   http://www.truveo.com/search.php?query=d.b.cooper+sort%3AmostRelevant
                   Additional               information:
                   http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/D._B._Cooper
                   Geoffrey               Gray               book               on               D.B.

    Cooper               http://huntfordbcooper.com/
                   Clifton               and               Marcus,               Reno               Gazette-Journal,               Nov.

    22,               2011.

    D.B.

    Cooper               Fascinates               40               Years               Later               in               Reno.
                   Portland               Symposium,               Nov.

    26,               2011
    Hammond,               Betsy.

    Oregonlive.com.

    November,               26,               2011.

    D.B.

    Cooper               symposium               reveals               insights,               details               and               conclusions               about               unsolved               Northwest               skyjacking               http://www.oregonlive.com/portland/index.ssf/2011/11/db_cooper_symposium_reveals_in.html
                   Bernton,               Hal.

    Seattle               Times.

    November               27,               2011.

    http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/localnews/2016867497_dbcooperconference27m.html?syndication=rss
                   







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