In 1971, a man using the alias D.B. Cooper boarded a Boeing 727 at the Seattle-Tacoma Airport and held the crew and passengers hostage with a bomb threat. He forced the pilot to land for fuel, then demanded $200,000 in ransom (which is equivalent to about $1.2 million today). Once the money was transferred onto the plane, Cooper forced the crew to take off once again. He then parachuted out of the plane over the Pacific Northwest woods with the money. He was never seen again.
The case of Cooper’s identity and whether or not he survived the jump has been one of the most prolific mysteries in recent decades. And just this week, we have learned who D.B. Cooper really was.
Tom Colbert, a television and film producer, has been studying the case with a team of 40 private investigators. After successfully suing the FBI for files related to D.B. Cooper, Colbert and his team obtained previously undisclosed information, including a confession letter that was written in code. It was sent to the Portland Oregonian newspaper in 1972, just months after the hijacking, and reads:
“This letter is too (sic) let you know I am not dead but really alive and just back from the Bahamas, so your silly troopers up there can stop looking for me. That is just how dumb this government is. I like your articles about me but you can stop them now. D.B. Cooper is not real. I want out of the system and saw a way through good ole Unk. Now it is Uncle’s turn to weep and pay one of it’s (sic) own some cash for a change. (And please tell the lackey cops D.B. Cooper is not my real name).”
Colbert noticed the letter was typed much like a different Cooper letter and gave this new one to Rick Sherwood, a former member of the Army Security Agency. Sherwood had previously decoded letters in various notes that were reportedly sent by Cooper.
Over the course of two weeks, Sherwood was able to decode the letter, which seems to confirm the identity of the infamous plane hijacker as 74-year-old Robert W. Rackstraw, a living Vietnam War veteran who has been a longtime suspect. In fact, his initials were decoded in several other letters involving Cooper sent to newspapers shortly after the heist.
Sherwood identified several phrases in the note that were used multiple times, and he used a system of letters and numbers to decode those phrases and reveal “by skyjacking a jet plane” and “I am 1st LT Robert Rackstraw.” This finding was confirmed by another member of the investigation team.
Colbert has been investigating Rackstraw for years and has claimed that several documents written by him contained coded taunts daring the FBI to catch him. Rackstraw was questioned in 1978, but was ultimately released due to lack of evidence.
Rackstraw enjoyed a successful military career as a pilot in the 1st Cavalry Division, where he learned to parachute. He was later kicked out once the army found out he had lied about his schooling. However, Colbert believes that the military provided Rackstraw with all the necessary skills to pull of the heist.
In the summer of 2016, the FBI closed the D.B. Cooper investigation on the belief that whoever Cooper was, he likely died of exposure in the woods after he landed. It was only after the case was closed that Colbert sued the FBI for the files and discovered the coded letter that might have proved his theory to be correct.
Rackstraw is alive and well, living in the San Diego area. He could not be reached for a comment when the news broke this week.
What do you think? Has this mystery finally been solved? Share your thoughts in the comments section below.
Joseph Ramirez says
I wonder if the recorded serial#s on the bill’s would have any numismatic value if they were ever found. I wouldn’t mind owning some.
ProvidentMetals.com says
Some of the bills were actually found and auctioned off a few years ago!
Vincent A Hauser says
This theory sounds plausible that someone with special training in the military could pull off a heist like this as they would have to know how to parachute out of an airplane , I believe they said a town nearby the landing site of alias JB Cooper had a wedding going on and he could have easily slipped through town as mostly everybody was at the wedding . Perhaps he knew that and had a get away car placed in town some where ??????
ProvidentMetals.com says
It’s definitely a neat theory to ponder!
Charles M says
I remember seeing in a TV program that the money has never been found in circulation. All of the serial numbers were recorded before the bills were handed over to him. Anyone else here heard that?
Joseph P. Finn says
Love to hear about the good guy’s getting away with a nice sum of cash. back in 1971 $200,000 would have done the trick for one guy. So, assuming he was alone, that would have set him up very nice. I wish you well D.B. Cooper, wherever you are now.
One other disgruntled DAV
Frank Zieser says
I do remember this happening, and if I remember correctly someone found some of the cash in a creek in the forest several years later. I once was acquainted with one of the agents who worked on that case. His feeling was that unless “Cooper” was a skilled survivalist that he would have perished in the forest because at that time most of that area was so remote and had never been penetrated by even the most skilled of hikers.
Frank.
ProvidentMetals.com says
Wow, thanks for that neat insight. Bet chatting with your friend was fascinating!
Cris says
Very interesting, this is the first time I have heard about this. I don’t condone his actions but escaping the plane parachuting is incredible! Maybe someone could make a movie about the story.
ProvidentMetals.com says
A movie was made about Cooper in 1981!