This Day in History : [ 24 / Nov ]

Hijacker parachutes into thunderstorm

A hijacker calling himself D.B.Cooper parachutes from a Northwest Orient Airlines 727 into a raging thunderstorm over Washington State.He had 200000 in ransom money in his possession.Cooper commandeered the aircraft shortly after takeoff showing a flight attendant something that looked like a bomb and informing the crew that he wanted 200000 four parachutes and no funny stuff.

The plane landed at Seattle-Tacoma International Airport where authorities met Coopers demands and evacuated most of the passengers.Cooper then demanded that the plane fly toward Mexico at a low altitude and ordered the remaining crew into the cockpit.At 813 p.m.as the plane flew over the Lewis River in southwest Washington the planes pressure gauge recorded Coopers jump from the aircraft.

Wearing only wraparound sunglasses a thin suit and a raincoat Cooper parachuted into a thunderstorm with winds in excess of 100 mph and temperatures well below zero at the 10000-foot altitude where he began his fall.The storm prevented an immediate capture and most authorities assumed he was killed during his apparently suicidal jump.No trace of Cooper was found during a massive search.In 1980 an eight-year-old boy uncovered a stack of nearly 5880 of the ransom money in the sands along the north bank of the Columbia River five miles from Vancouver Washington.

The fate of Cooper remains a mystery.