DB Cooper: The Legendary Daredevil
Postscripts
Hijackings: The Cooper hijacking and his copycats finally helped drive home the vulnerability of jets to acts of air piracy. In 1973, a device known as a Cooper Vane was added to Boeing’s 727-100s to disable the use of the aft stairs during flight. Also that year, the FAA mandated screening of passengers and carry-on luggage. Hijackings declined, but violent political acts against innocent air travelers grew more deadly. A September 1974 bombing of a jet from Tel Aviv to
The Jet: The “Cooper” 727-100, registered with the FAA as aircraft No. N467US, was manufactured in 1964-65 and delivered to Northwest Orient on
The Crew: Capt. William Scott, pilot of the Cooper jet, died of prostate cancer in March 2001. Scott never talked much about the case, said his widow, Frances, but he had a theory. "He felt he jumped into
The Enduring Mystery:

The mystery of D.B. Cooper’s whereabouts has a marathoner’s legs. The case continues to bubble up frequently in crime, air travel and skydiving circles. The November 2003 issue of Parachutist, the official magazine of the United States Parachute Association, carries a long feature article about the hijacking. And dozens weighed in on a recent chat thread at dropzone.com, a Web site for skydiving enthusiasts, which asked the familiar question, “Is Cooper dead or alive?” As a parachuting wag with the handle “skydiventom” put it: “I think he's gotta be either dead or the luckiest human in history.“
Were he so lucky, Dan Cooper is in his late 70s now. If not, he splattered 32 years ago, and counting.
































