D.B. Cooper's Money
In some of the stories about D.B. Cooper's parachute possibly being found, the extortion money is mentioned. Now the FBI is claiming that none of the $200,000 made it into circulation. Some $5800 was found on the banks of the Columbia River years later.
Why do they think that none of the $200,000 from the 1971 crime never made it into circulation? Well, the FBI believes that Cooper died when he jumped out of the plane. They don't think he even opened the parachute. Of course, this is purely speculation on the FBI's part. Therefore, if D.B. Cooper died, then he didn't spend any of the money.
At the time, several rewards were offered for returning any of the money, and the serial numbers of all the $20 bills were distributed to banks. In his 1985 book, "D.B. Cooper, What Really Happened," Max Gunther wrote:
"Bank people feel in general that their chances of participating in any meaningful way in such rewards are slim. If an alert teller or bookkeeping clerk spots a listed bill, that is typically the first minor step in an investigation. The bill may have changed hands many times since it was originally spent by the criminal being sought. Tracking the bill back to that criminal would involve a long chain of people, most of whom will feel they have a greater claim on the reward than the teller who first spotted the bill. In most cases the biggest share of the reward--if not all of it--goes to the detective or witness who makes the final connections leading to the arrest. The teller, if lucky, gets ten bucks and a letter of official gratitude. More often, the teller gets forgotten."
It's doubtful that any serious attempt was made to spot any of the bills.
Now, Kenneth Christiansen, who was employed by Northwest as a flight attendant, purchased a house with cash about a year after D.B. Cooper carried out his daring crime. Also, his lifestyle was seemingly beyond the means of most Northwest employees.
I recently talked with Bill Rataczak, the co-pilot of Flight 305, the Boeing 727 that Cooper hijacked. He told me that Cooper insisted that the wing flaps be tilted 15 degrees, to slow the plane down. "He knew that airplane," he said. "A flight attendant wouldn't know to do that." I reminded him that Christiansen was a Northwest mechanic before he became a flight attendant. He said that he didn't know that. He also didn't know that Christiansen was a former paratrooper.
The FBI asked Sherlock Investigations to submit DNA evidence from Kenneth Christiansen. We did about nine months ago. It's probably in a box with all the other evidence from the case, in the basement of the FBI office in Seattle.

3 Comments:
At 1:39 PM ,
Seraphine said...
It's interesting stuff, D.B. Cooper. Whatever you think of the man, folk hero or criminal, it took enormous daring to hijack a commercial airliner and do what he did.
If he lived, it was pretty much the perfect crime (he got away with it/nobody was hurt) and if he died... well, who wouldn't like to be hiking and find $200,000?
Either way, it lights the imagination.
At 4:47 PM ,
Anonymous said...
From what I've been reading, I think Sherlock Investigations is really unto something. Stick to your guns and follow every lead. You might be right that Kenneth Christiansen really was D.B. Cooper.
At 1:29 AM ,
LUKe said...
The idea that somehow some of the bills could have been circulated and never been detected as part of the ransom money is ridiculous. 20 dollar bills have a life expectancy of 24 months. (And would have been retired even if not worn out by 1996.) And would have had their serials checked before they were destroyed. I bet the dude either cratered into the woods and lost his cash on the way down. Or, survived just barely, found out that the FBI had all the serial numbers of the bills, realized that it would be traced back to him. So, he chucked the cash in the river and went on with his life.
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