D.B. Cooper Flight 305 Portland to Seattle Boeing 727 Airplane Hijacking Reno-Tahoe International Airport Parachute Jump Missing Money Conspiracy by William C. Lewis

D.B. Cooper Flight 305 Portland to Seattle Boeing 727 Airplane Hijacking Reno-Tahoe International Airport Parachute Jump Missing Money Conspiracy

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D.B. Cooper was an unidentified man who hi-jacked a Northwest Orient Airlines Boeing 727 airplane flight on Nov. 24, 1971, known as Flight 305, that was destined for Seattle from Portland so that he could get $200,000 of ransom money from Seattle First National Bank in a bag, in addition to four parachutes to use to jump from the aircraft. Read in this informative and engaging report about D.B. Cooper's interactions with the flight crew and stewardesses aboard the aircraft while the pilots controlling the airplane hovered over Seattle to make it appear to the other passengers that the airplane was just solving a mechanical problem by burning fuel rather than the truth, which was that the pilots were waiting for the FBI and police to deliver the parachutes and ransom money once Flight 305 landed at SeaTac Seattle-Tacoma International Airport so that the passengers aboard the plane could be released by D.B. Cooper. Find out what happens after D.B. Cooper got the $200,000 in ransom money and the four parachutes before jumping out of the airplane with a parachute provided from an Issaquah Washington skydiving school and delivered to Seattle Tacoma International Airport by police that picked up the parachute from the skydiving school. The ransom money was delivered to Seattle-Tacoma International Airport by the FBI. Find out how, after the passengers of the airplane, and two of the flight attendants were released at Seattle Tacoma International Airport in exchange for the money and parachutes, D.B. Cooper endangers the lives of the flight crew in the cockpit and one of the airplane flight attendants who remained on the plane after the aircraft took off from SeaTac for Reno-Tahoe International Airport by opening the aft rear staircase of the airplane while this Boeing 727 was at high altitude. D.B. Cooper, desperate to evade the authorities, jumped out of the airplane using one of the ransom parachutes somewhere over Southwest Washington. Only $5,880 of the $200,000 of ransom money was recovered. This report reveals where the $5,880 of the money was located, not far from where D.B. Cooper jumped out of the airplane.

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