DB Cooper: The Legendary Daredevil
"I'm Dan Cooper. So Am I."
Over the years, thousands of Americans have dropped dimes on friends, relatives and colleagues who resemble the famous “Bing Crosby” Cooper sketch. The FBI says some 10,000 names have been whispered to the agency. Many of those fingered were experienced skydivers with vaguest likeness—especially if you squint.
Some of those fingered missing persons, but no lead ever panned out. It seems unlikely that someone could disappear and not leave a single friend or relative wondering—a parent, spouse, child or sibling. But the FBI says that may have been the case with Dan Cooper, if in fact he splattered. The agency says Cooper may have been a loner who had isolated himself.
Dozens of men have confessed to loved ones that they are Cooper, and the FBI has quietly checked out a number of them. The identities of a few have made their way into the media, often posthumously.

In 1995, for example, Duane Weber, a
Another Cooper claim involved a
But the FBI rejected the story for lack of evidence, just as it rejected Duane Weber’s. For example, no fingerprint found on the jet matched either man’s.
As Himmelsbach, the retired FBI man, put it, "Every so often one (of these) would come along, and I'd get the rush of adrenaline. There's a guy in a bar with a bunch of $20 bills, he's limping on one leg and someone asks where he got the roll, and he says he might have hijacked an airplane. You track those things down, and they just burn out."
One of the more peculiar Cooper stories involved Elsie Rodgers, a grandmother from
Perhaps the most elaborate claim was laid out in “D.B. Cooper: What Really Happened,” a 1985 book by Max Gunther based on six telephone conversations in 1982 with a woman who identified herself only as “Clara.” She explained she discovered an injured Cooper holed up in her garden shed near rural
The FBI once again rejected the account. There were at least two problems with the story: the laundered bills never turned up, according to the feds, and her account of Cooper’s meticulous planning relegates the Montana hijacking two weeks before Cooper’s to an astonishing coincidence of timing.
If Gunther was hoodwinked by a Cooper tale, he wasn’t the first. Not long after the hijacking, Newsweek magazine reportedly nearly published a cover-story exclusive featuring an interview with Cooper. It turned out the magazine was the victim of two hoaxers who were later convicted of fraud.
































