The Debrief With MyronGainesX - May 29, 2023


Fed Explains DB Cooper, The Only Successful Air Hijacking In History!


Episode Stats

Length

2 hours and 18 minutes

Words per Minute

191.12888

Word Count

26,532

Sentence Count

32

Misogynist Sentences

23

Hate Speech Sentences

46


Summary

In this episode we cover the murder of Nicole Nicole Brown aka Nicole Brown Simpson and the conspiracy surrounding her murder. We cover the involvement of the FBI in Nicole's murder and how the mafia played a key role in the cover up.


Transcript

00:00:00.640 and we are live what's up guys welcome to fed reacts today we're going to be covering
00:00:04.400 db cooper man this was going to be lit let's get into it
00:00:09.360 i'm a special agent with homelands investigations okay guys hsi
00:00:12.960 friend of jeffrey williams and associate ysl did commit the felony of here's what 69 actually got
00:00:17.040 considered conspiracy this attack shifted the whole u.s government this guy got arrested
00:00:21.360 espionage okay trading secrets with the russia yeah killer is a pseudonym of an unidentified
00:00:26.640 serial killer who operate in northern california serial killers got samuel little etc they really
00:00:31.040 get off on getting attention from the near jeffrey epstein sex exploited and abused dozens of minor
00:00:36.480 girls it was oj working together to get nicole killed we're going to go over his past the gang
00:00:42.160 time so that this all makes sense
00:00:48.320 yep and we're back what's up guys welcome uh to fed it um actually sorry fed reacts um
00:00:54.240 um i got uh angie in the house i mean angie you want to um introduce yourself real quick and give
00:00:59.360 some quick updates hi guys um updates well i still have like a long list of cases that you have been
00:01:06.720 requesting uh i'm gonna pay more attention to the super chats so if you guys like requesting the super
00:01:13.920 fat i'll be writing down your your cases your request uh if not you can go to at fed reacts on instagram
00:01:22.880 uh we're posting more more stuff there and we're being active there so you guys can like request on
00:01:28.640 on the dms i'll be reading you all and yeah that's it boom all right and i know some of you guys are
00:01:34.160 probably wondering where's kim uh she's uh she's out of the country right now with her mom she went out
00:01:38.640 she went with her mom uh traveled so um she'll be back i think tomorrow so you guys will see her on
00:01:43.760 fresh and fit uh but i got angie here helping me um shout out to her she came just came from work and
00:01:48.320 she's helping out um what else new intro as you guys can see here uh i'm gonna still tweak it a
00:01:54.240 little bit um i want to make it a little bit maybe a tad bit longer and add a few more things
00:01:59.360 but other than that it's not going to be you know like two minutes like the last one so don't worry
00:02:03.440 um what else uh we got a couple cases in the in the list that we still got to hit um i'm probably
00:02:09.440 going to do an episode for you guys on the mafia that covers all the families all across the united
00:02:14.080 states because i know we covered the five grand families in new york then we covered the outfit
00:02:18.480 at chicago al capone and then we're going to go ahead and cover uh the traficantes down in florida
00:02:24.160 a couple of the guys out of california vegas um i think there was a one out of cincinnati etc so we're
00:02:30.400 going to cover all those ones that we didn't miss originally and then i'm probably going to do one
00:02:34.000 more episode with ryan dawson we're going to cover how the mafia was intimately tied with intelligence
00:02:39.040 agencies such as the cia etc um and that will eventually tie into john f kennedy later on when
00:02:45.040 we do the gfk show um and then also uh serial killers that we got on the list i got the torso
00:02:51.760 killer on uh angie can you think of any other ones that they asked for oh we already did him though
00:03:00.640 oh sorry i'm look camper yeah ed kemper okay yeah all right
00:03:04.240 uh uh who else uh the brothers those melendos brothers oh yeah the menendez brothers um
00:03:11.280 i want to do aileen awareness oh yes yes we still have to do her too the only female serial killer and
00:03:17.360 then anything else there are plenty there are plenty i can name like a bunch right now but okay i don't
00:03:24.080 know if you want me to name them all because it's a bunch of people asking you know yeah um loads of
00:03:29.600 cases yeah so we'll make sure we get those for you guys um but i think we got probably two more
00:03:34.720 episodes of the mafia and then the mafia will be done and then we will go ahead and also do uh the
00:03:39.120 colombian cartel in the miami uh you know connection from the 1980s with pablo escobar etc um it's kind
00:03:45.680 of funny um kim has quite a bit of knowledge on that because i think it was her mom's friend dated one of
00:03:52.560 pablo escobar's workers or something like that so she has quite a bit of knowledge she's been to the
00:03:57.520 mansion before the old mansion it's run down now um but she's from medellin as well so she has a lot
00:04:03.280 of insider knowledge on that organization and a lot of um i guess uh links she's probably the drug
00:04:10.560 driver herself who knows but anyway but yeah she'll be helping with the pablo escobar stuff uh quite a
00:04:16.320 bit because she is colombian and she's from that part of colombia so uh definitely we will cover that
00:04:21.200 you guys have been asking me for pablo escobar forever uh and i'll also be covering um chapel probably
00:04:27.120 after that right we're going to try to do it in chronological order we're going to hit the 80s
00:04:30.560 first with the colombians and the cocaine in miami you know griselda blanco all that stuff we'll
00:04:36.400 probably cover all that because it's all tied in together and then we're going to go into the
00:04:39.840 mexican side with uh chapel guzman then we'll go into the zetas etc so don't worry we'll cover all that
00:04:45.680 um what else here uh i guess we can hit some of these chats before we get into it um let's see here yeah
00:04:51.440 um i thank you guys so much for the for the support i really appreciate it uh we got here
00:04:57.440 mitchaka goes baron life hack when buying a property first identifies them boys and you'll
00:05:01.280 automatically get accepted chris is a bum with mo with four wives w ryan yeah i that's a fact i've
00:05:06.800 lost a bunch of properties to them boys if you guys know what i'm saying the uh who else uh we got here
00:05:12.320 michael mistroke one dollar appreciate that greatly sir uh jose rubio going when we get into steven avery case
00:05:17.920 i don't i don't i don't have that one let me just write it down all right she'll write it down
00:05:22.880 actually i have it right here oh she did i'm trying to remember who that is that that name sounds very
00:05:28.240 familiar uh you can look it up right okay we're here yeah pull it up on your side angie uh we got
00:05:33.680 here sexy tom goes will you ever do shoko asahara a founder of um shinri koi yo cult he was convicted of
00:05:43.120 masterminding the deadly 1995 sarin gas attack on a tokyo subway i try to stay away from foreign
00:05:48.640 criminals guys uh you know you guys been asking a lot of like the jacuzza yeah mob and stuff and when
00:05:55.280 i say foreign criminals i mean operating in foreign countries i don't like if it's america like if it's
00:05:59.280 triads and yakuza that are operating united states that's one thing but foreign criminals i try to stay
00:06:04.400 away from because i'm not too well versed in their laws um but i will cover it if like you know there's
00:06:09.280 enough ask for but that's the first time i've had asked uh gotten that request um the steven avery is
00:06:14.640 a baseball player but i don't know what happened to him baseball player yeah it's he's from the
00:06:20.240 season at reds he worked for atlanta braves boston red socks and the detroit are you sure that's the
00:06:26.800 same steven avery they're asking for i guess he is because yeah probably a killer or criminal of some
00:06:32.320 kind of they're asking for that i don't know all right i'll keep going here uh while she does that um
00:06:38.240 we got here three diglets goes it's sunday you know what that means fed is sundays now fed react
00:06:42.720 sunday is 200k on the way let's go appreciate that my friend harper thompson goes will you ever do
00:06:47.040 jesse smollett he was convicted ah what the guy that lied about racism maybe myron will ever do
00:06:53.840 sinolo's cartel highest ranking hitman el chino anthrax and tracks by the way we need west watson on
00:06:59.440 fnf don't worry west watson is coming uh in june guys we got him locked in uh for one of the money
00:07:05.040 mondays and then as far as uh sinaloa's i will do that don't remember to announce the live show
00:07:09.280 and michael frenchies and everything uh oh yeah we did that last last week last thursday oh no but
00:07:15.920 he's gonna come back um in july he's gonna come back and he's got an event with well mike tyson yeah
00:07:21.680 yes yes yes yes uh and i will be there too guys july 22nd 22 year old trucker from hartford uh connecticut
00:07:28.640 700 credit score blessed to know we are from the same state yeah shout out to hartford man 10 miles off the
00:07:33.120 road uh from the britain uh please do wars cartel el senor de los cielos okay we definitely will be
00:07:39.840 doing that we're going to be covering mexican drug trafficking quite a bit uh you don't understand how
00:07:43.760 clutch you and angie been for me there's been several nights where i stayed up till 4 am just
00:07:47.360 watching the videos jody aries dc snipers casey anthony and many more i fuck with y'all thank you
00:07:51.200 amir i appreciate that greatly man we uh try to give you all this sauce man uh it's not just debating
00:07:56.640 women all the time we're trying to give you guys some true crime knowledge as well uh when is the next
00:08:00.160 calling show i want a peaceful debate myron uh and that's from i don't play games uh if we got time
00:08:04.640 my friend uh and then this was the japanese one uh let me think we're caught up i think we're caught
00:08:11.840 up yeah and did we have the right stephen avery on that one no and the only thing that oh there we go
00:08:18.080 making a murderer the netflix special that's what it was okay to do that in the midwest i knew it that
00:08:22.960 name sounded familiar okay okay making a murderer yeah yeah yeah yeah there we go um okay let me
00:08:27.760 time about so yeah guys do me a quick favor like the video subscribe to the channel if you haven't
00:08:33.680 already we're definitely the most uh uh w myer flexible content we got y'all baby we guys we cover
00:08:39.280 true crime we cover serial killers uh terrorists bank robberies we've covered pretty much man everything
00:08:46.080 financial crimes as well yes we have her don't worry she's gonna come in when we do the colombians
00:08:52.720 guys uh with pablo escobar and stuff like that which uh kim will be heavily involved in that so
00:08:57.120 we're gonna cover the the colombians and we're gonna cover miami in the 1980s as well um but yeah
00:09:03.280 guys we're flexible over here man we don't just give you guys self-improvement content we also give
00:09:06.800 you guys true crime stuff on all different types of crime right so uh make sure to subscribe to the
00:09:12.000 channel if you haven't already uh bro you should do something on the shower posse jamaican gang 1400
00:09:16.960 murders in the 80s uh okay i can i we still need to do um speaking of jamaican i might bring doll face
00:09:23.200 back for the for that one with you guys um the guy that was a drug trafficker that got arrested by the
00:09:28.320 dea i can't remember his name right now god damn it someone in the chat's gonna put it for me but it
00:09:32.240 was a big drug trafficker out of jamaica um that the da went after uh like 10 years ago uh anything
00:09:38.480 else here uh hey mara kiki camarena next or you going to tie that with the mexican series i will
00:09:43.600 tie that with the mexican series i actually met his family when i was an agent in laredo guys uh they
00:09:47.200 came um to laredo to give a speech so yeah rest in peace to him uh i work at the gym and was watching
00:09:54.720 you and a client said i see you're watching fnf you're a brother huh i love seeing gym bros unite
00:10:00.720 absolutely man that's what it's about bro um and i think that's that's it cool all right guys so we're
00:10:06.720 going to be covering um no it was the vibes cartel i did vibes cartel already there we go
00:10:10.640 christopher dudas coke that's who we're going to be covering um for the drug trafficking as well i
00:10:15.680 have him on the list i've had him on the list for a very long time so that's going to come very soon
00:10:20.000 uh sorry guys we're going to be covering db cooper today db cooper a legend uh by the way um db cooper
00:10:26.800 is a media uh epithet for an unidentified man who hijacked northwest orient airlines flight 305 a
00:10:33.280 boeing 727 aircraft in the united states airspace on november 24th 1971 basically the day before
00:10:39.440 thanksgiving uh during a flight from portland oregon to seattle washington the hijacker told a flight
00:10:44.240 attendant he was armed with a bomb demanded 200 000 and ransom equivalent to 1.4 million in 2022
00:10:49.920 uh which today nowadays guys i did the math it's worth about uh almost 1.5 nowadays yeah it's it's
00:10:56.000 1 million and a half 1.5 1.5 yeah exactly and requested four parachutes upon landing in seattle and you
00:11:02.160 guys are going to see here why he asked for the four parachutes here in a second after releasing
00:11:05.600 the passengers in seattle the hijacker instructed the flight crew to refuel the aircraft and begin
00:11:10.160 a second flight to mexico city with a refueling stop in reno nevada about 30 minutes after taking
00:11:15.200 off from seattle the hijacker opened the aircraft's uh aft door deployed the staircase and parachuted into
00:11:21.120 the night over southwestern washington the hijacker has never been found or conclusively identified okay
00:11:28.240 so i got this documentary here guys from uh let me know shout out to angie for finding this one
00:11:33.120 um we went through a bunch of documentaries guys i probably watched like three or four um angie can
00:11:37.920 watch a few more i watched like four uh to try to get you guys the best one that also wouldn't get us
00:11:43.040 hit with the copyright but we it's okay don't worry we're gonna go ahead and play portions of other
00:11:48.160 documentaries as well we're just gonna be stopping them frequently for uh you know commentary and i think
00:11:53.520 we should be safe but uh this one i think is going to be the main one that we use is pretty informative
00:11:57.760 and i'm going to be stopping and giving our commentary and this comes from lamino so shout
00:12:01.440 out to him uh like this video subscribe to the channel as well i think he did a pretty good one
00:12:05.920 on jack the ripper if i'm not mistaken this guy um because you guys have been asking for jack the
00:12:09.680 ripper as well for a while so uh let's go ahead and play this thing and uh we'll pause it as needed
00:12:16.720 don't forget to like the video by the way we got 875 y'all watching right now like the video
00:12:20.400 just let me know
00:12:43.600 a daring parachute escape from a flying 727 somewhere between wings search was made of the plane
00:12:49.040 immediately we don't know who he was where he came from or where he went i expect that we'll keep
00:12:55.520 looking uh until we find him or find out what happened
00:13:10.400 and you guys are going to see that there's multiple theories on what might have happened to db cooper we're
00:13:14.240 going to go ahead and explore all of them then you guys can go ahead and pick and if there's anyone in
00:13:17.280 the chat that's a parachuter that's a trained parachuter whether you're a paratrooper in the
00:13:20.960 military or you do it just for fun or whatever um make sure to be active in the comments i want
00:13:25.680 to get your guys's perspective as well
00:13:29.760 in the afternoon of november the 24th 1971 a middle-aged man carrying a briefcase walked into
00:13:45.120 portland international airport and purchased a one-way ticket to seattle washington
00:13:49.920 the man identified himself as dan cooper and this is the actual original ticket right here guys you
00:13:58.000 can see and this is really the only handwriting that they have that belongs to him was when he
00:14:02.800 wrote his name right here and along with 36 other passengers and a crew of six he soon boarded northwest
00:14:09.040 airlines flight 305 once aboard cooper made himself comfortable in the middle of the last row of seats
00:14:16.400 on the right side of the cabin he ordered a drink and had a smoke because this was the 70s and here
00:14:23.360 you go guys real fast here is a copy of the actual ticket from the official fbi website and they pretty much
00:14:29.440 closed the case guys back in uh 2016 uh and now this is in the museum the fbi museum you can see here
00:14:37.120 northwest orient dan cooper uh seattle pretty much he paid 20 bucks for the ticket which um real quick
00:14:45.760 angie can you see what 20 was in 1971 compared to today uh and you can see here he was uh where
00:14:52.240 he was trying to go etc november 24th 1971. so the really interesting stuff it's a piece of american
00:14:58.560 history nowadays and just so y'all know um he was it was 149 149 dollars today yeah okay
00:15:07.040 so um just so y'all know this was the only successful plane hijacking in american history
00:15:13.040 was yeah this is the only one that hasn't been found just yet yes once the flight was cleared for
00:15:18.720 departure cooper turned around and handed an envelope to flight attendant florence schaffner
00:15:24.880 inside the envelope was a note featuring a handwritten message stating he had a bomb
00:15:30.800 schaffner reluctantly sat down beside him and glimpsed what appeared to be eight sticks of dynamite
00:15:35.680 inside his briefcase all right so let's go ahead and give this a little bit more illustrative for
00:15:39.920 you guys i actually have the interview of miss schaffner right here for y'all man shout out to
00:15:47.200 i was able to pull up this old ass unsolved mysteries episode where they actually have
00:15:51.840 her and ask her some questions so let's go ahead and pull that up real quick and play
00:15:54.720 you'll need to put this under your front seat please
00:16:00.720 he handed me a note and he kept looking at me and there she is right there and just so you guys know
00:16:08.400 uh she didn't immediately open it up because back then right you know they were out there you know
00:16:14.480 pretty much thinking women deserve less right and uh yeah that's how they flirted back then and then also
00:16:21.600 like flight attendants were very sex um they were sexualized quite a bit in mainstream media etc so
00:16:28.320 it was very common for flight attendants to get notes from you know businessmen traveling lonely
00:16:32.960 guys whatever it may be so she ignored it for me she just took the nose like okay whatever but then
00:16:37.360 he's like no no no you better look at that note lady um yeah he didn't say that but you guys get
00:16:42.960 the point but he told he was very um persistent that you need to look at the snow and that's when she saw
00:16:48.560 what was going on but this is the actual flight attendant that received the original note from him
00:16:52.640 and i just ignored him the first time he looked at me and then then he said i want you to read the note
00:17:02.480 it was printed miss
00:17:06.480 i have a bomb in my briefcase i want you to sit beside me this is no joke there's a bomb in here
00:17:13.360 i saw a big battery with six holy and just so you guys know because some of you guys are probably
00:17:21.360 wondering like what the hell how does this guy get a bomb on the plane guys back in 1971 there was zero
00:17:27.520 security at airports okay you walk in you put you know take 20 bucks hey i want to fly to xyz cool boom
00:17:35.760 and then you walk on no security no nothing okay and uh it was just a different time they didn't in
00:17:42.080 fact uh it's because of this case that the airlines started taking like consideration into security like
00:17:49.120 they started like adding more protocols of security protocols into you know the process of taking a
00:17:54.960 plane yeah everyone wants to blame you know muhammad and them right but the reality is is this guy's
00:18:00.880 doing db cooper's fault because that's when they started taking security really seriously after
00:18:05.200 this and they actually um stopped flying planes that had the uh you guys are going to see here the
00:18:10.320 stairway that comes out the back on 727 after this situation as well another thing is that they used
00:18:16.480 those planes uh because uh those kind of planes were used a lot in the vietnam war so yes of the
00:18:24.720 parachute the cia was using it to drop off supplies and soldiers and then because of the because of the
00:18:30.080 war and that they started using us commercial um planes so then they started like you know like
00:18:36.160 one one man just said that they stopped using those kind of planes because people started hijacking even
00:18:41.280 more after db cooper so you'll see like db cooper was like a you know like the first copycats yeah
00:18:47.280 came out after him yeah again i saw some of you guys were saying mccoy etc you guys are going to see
00:18:51.520 here why it probably wasn't mccoy here in a bit but uh but yeah so for some of you younger guys out there
00:18:57.360 that are like how the hell did this guy get a bomb on a plane in the 1970s things were different you
00:19:01.840 just put 20 bucks down and you go wherever the hell you want it's not like nowadays where you
00:19:04.960 got to reserve it go through security all that other stuff none of that back then dynamite sticks
00:19:09.920 wrapped around the battery and he said to me all i have to do is attach this wire to this gadget here
00:19:18.480 and we all be dead and so began one of the most infamous crimes in u.s history cool so yeah back
00:19:28.480 then you can also like someone just said in the chat you can also smoke which is crazy to me when
00:19:34.000 i was watching these documentaries like this guy smoked like eight cigarettes yes in the whole flight
00:19:40.560 and it was a 30 minute flight like to seattle on this because you'll see later that he changed the whole
00:19:45.520 thing yeah he smoked eight cigarettes in a plane i mean how could people be there like even smell
00:19:53.360 this smoke coming of the cigarettes it's just crazy to me yeah yeah definitely uh i mean and you go to
00:19:58.960 other parts of the world they they chain smoke like that but yeah in the united states that's that's not
00:20:02.880 a thing anymore but yeah back in the 70s they didn't give a shit man cooper's demands were quite simple
00:20:09.280 he wanted two hundred thousand dollars in cash and four parachutes he also demanded a fuel truck to
00:20:15.440 stand ready to refuel the aircraft was pay attention to that guys he wanted four parachutes okay they
00:20:21.680 landed in seattle should they fail to comply with his demands he threatened to quote do the job
00:20:28.480 once the flight was airborne chaffner went to inform the car let me read that note for y'all one more
00:20:32.400 time back i want two hundred thousand dollars by 5 p.m in cash put it in a knapsack i want two black
00:20:37.920 pairs excuse me i want two back parachutes and two front parachutes when we land i want a fuel truck ready
00:20:44.160 to refuel no funny stuff or i'll do the job actually this is not the original no there you know there you
00:20:51.040 don't know will say uh i want two hundred thousand in american currency negotiable american currency he used
00:20:58.960 that word that specifically well they don't know because they never got the original note yeah no
00:21:03.440 i know but it what the the pilot yeah the pilot said back um what yeah because when the pilot was
00:21:10.720 communicating and they were able to get the transcripts yeah he was saying we need two hundred
00:21:14.160 thousand dollars of negotiable currency yeah and but they don't know if that's what he said on the note
00:21:18.960 but they're like okay maybe he inferred that that's a main that's a main thing like it's very very
00:21:23.680 important like thing to say because people will also create like a conspiracy theory that this guy
00:21:30.560 was canadian because of those game of words yes because he said american negotiable currency yes
00:21:37.680 yeah in the notes um so yeah this there is speculation for sure that he could have been a dual citizen
00:21:44.000 uh or been canadian yeah job once the flight was airborne schaffner went to inform the cockpit crew
00:21:51.200 while another flight attendant by the name of tina mucklow remained by cooper's side by using a
00:21:55.760 telephone in the rear of the cabin mucklow acted as an intermediary between cooper and the rest of
00:22:00.800 the flight crew for the remainder of the hijacking for the next hour and a half flight three real quick
00:22:06.880 tina mucklow who was she guys she was the one that pretty much was with him the whole time
00:22:11.280 uh and here she is right here actually you know what let me go back we'll play this for a bit and then
00:22:18.000 i'll show y'all who the tina mucklow angle by maintained a holding pattern near seattle while
00:22:23.520 local and federal authorities scrambled to procure the ransom as well as the four parachutes now mind
00:22:28.960 you guys this is a 30 minute flight but they ended up staying on the air much longer just so they can
00:22:32.960 go ahead and gather the parachutes and the money ten thousand twenty dollar bills were collected from
00:22:38.880 a local bank while the owner of a nearby skydiving school supplied the chutes at 5 45 pm more than two hours
00:22:46.720 past its scheduled arrival flight 305 finally touched down in seattle by this point it was
00:22:52.560 well after sunset and the aircraft was brought to a remote section of the tarmac once the flight came
00:22:58.240 to us i don't remember if they say in this documentary but back then two thousand two hundred thousand
00:23:04.560 dollars uh weighted like 23 pounds yes 20 dollar bills yes which is like a lot yeah he didn't specify
00:23:13.120 the denominations of currency he wanted uh so they ended up just giving it to him in 20 bills and it
00:23:18.080 cost yeah about 23 pounds 21 to 23 pounds yeah which is a lot yeah to you know to jump out of a plane
00:23:25.680 with yeah top both the ransom and the parachutes were handed over to mucklow who then brought them back
00:23:31.360 aboard in exchange cooper permitted two of the flight attendants as well as all the passengers to disembark
00:23:37.440 many of whom had not yet realized the flight had been hijacked none of them knew it wasn't until they
00:23:42.640 actually landed guys and there was fbi agents trying to question them that they found out that they
00:23:46.480 had been um held uh they had kind of been hijacked and um cooper was smart he did this on purpose so
00:23:53.920 there wouldn't be panic and people wouldn't come and attack him yeah with the ransom paid and only four
00:24:00.160 crew members remaining on board cooper told mucklow to inform the captain that he wanted to fly to mexico
00:24:05.920 city they were to fly with the landing gear down the flaps at 15 degrees and below 10 000 feet the lights
00:24:14.320 and okay so as y'all can see already extremely detailed instructions okay this is stuff that
00:24:20.800 typically someone that is very familiar with planes maybe even a pilot would ask because average joe ain't
00:24:26.160 gonna know that you could even do all this stuff and no proper altitudes to be flying at with flaps and
00:24:32.240 all this other stuff out so um this tells you quite a bit about the individual being very familiar with
00:24:36.800 planes and parachuting to a degree now there's a little bit of contention here in the db cooper
00:24:41.040 world which you know i found this out from doing the research but off of this alone you guys can already
00:24:46.240 tell he's more aware than 99 of people the cabin were to be switched off and the aft stairway which opens
00:24:52.880 from the underbelly of the fuselage was to remain extended and again this is something exclusive to
00:24:58.480 only 727 planes back in that era guys okay as angie was saying before um back then the cia was using
00:25:05.440 727s to allow um people to basically secretly jump out of the back of the plane to supply soldiers and
00:25:13.360 um supplies uh during the vietnam war two of cooper's demands could not be satisfied first of all the
00:25:22.080 flight configuration he'd requested would not allow for a non-stop flight to mexico city as such cooper
00:25:28.000 proposed a refueling stop in phoenix yuma or sacramento before they all agreed on reno nevada
00:25:35.440 second of all it was not possible to depart with a ventral staircase extended cooper agreed to retract
00:25:41.120 the stairs on the condition that mucklow remained by his side and taught him how to extend and he
00:25:45.760 wasn't happy about that guys he wanted to take off with the with the um stairway open but obviously that
00:25:51.040 would have been impossible to do for the pilot you know because of cabin pressure and all this other
00:25:55.120 stuff and then was the plane was airborne parked for nearly two hours due to complications with
00:26:00.800 refueling flight 305 was back in the air by 7 36 pm less than five minutes after takeoff cooper told
00:26:08.080 mucklow to head for the cockpit and that from this point onwards he was not to be disturbed the last time
00:26:13.520 she saw cooper he was standing in the middle of the aisle as if though he was preparing to jump
00:26:19.600 yeah that's pretty g though i ain't gonna lie yeah before that time because it was two hours this guy
00:26:25.680 waiting for the plane to took to take off he grew very impatient with like the crew and everything
00:26:32.320 because the pilot was just like trying to figure out how to get to mexico city or to reno re nevada and
00:26:38.800 like he was trying to seek like routes to take those you know to to take the plane there yeah and he used to
00:26:46.080 grow so impatient that he just told the pilot to you know to get the show going yeah he said let's
00:26:51.760 get the show on the road was his exact wording um because yeah he was because basically he didn't
00:26:56.640 even tell the pilot to take a certain route because he just wanted to get the hell off uh off there
00:27:00.720 because at this point guys the plane is surrounded as they're on the floor right on the they're on the
00:27:05.200 on the tarmac the plane was surrounded by fbi agents with rifles so um he told the flight attendants
00:27:11.200 to close all the blinds so they wouldn't shoot him and uh he asked for four parachutes and you
00:27:15.280 guys are going to see here in a little bit why he asked for four parachutes was actually an ingenious
00:27:18.560 idea but uh the 1970s were a different time okay guys i'll tell you how that when it comes to law
00:27:23.920 enforcement and what they would do with criminals but um that's why he wanted the blinds covered and
00:27:29.280 he needed that woman there with him as an insurance especially since they didn't want to lower
00:27:33.200 the uh the stairway for him and also from this point on they they had like two jets to score the flight of
00:27:40.240 course oh yes the air force air force had two yes yeah had two uh two fighter jets following the
00:27:45.920 plane as well but it was dark as hell so they couldn't see anything and windy and windy as well
00:27:51.600 mucklow joined the rest of the crew locked the cockpit door behind her and some three hours later
00:27:57.280 flight 305 safely landed in reno once the flight came to a stop the crew carefully ventured into the
00:28:04.080 rear of the cabin but there was no sign that's an actual photo from the plane enough cooper nor the bomb
00:28:10.240 the aft stairway had been extended mid-flight and was slightly damaged upon landing it seemed that
00:28:15.920 there was only one explanation for the hijacker's absence at some point between seattle and reno
00:28:21.680 cooper had strapped on a parachute walked down the stairs and leaped into the dark of night
00:28:28.640 crazy so here i'm gonna show you guys a little clip here from the db cooper netflix series okay um
00:28:36.240 of kind of this situation and four parachutes aboard the plane headed for reno
00:28:45.200 cooper looks into the money bag he's happy and he has instructions
00:28:51.600 he's asking to fly at 250 miles an hour which is slow for a jet with the flaps down at minimum height
00:29:00.000 even the pilots didn't know the aircraft was capable of flying that slow and that low and he said it
00:29:07.440 can be done do it
00:29:11.600 they head south over this area called the dark divide tina mucklow was alone with him sitting in
00:29:18.800 the last road and here she is along with uh shaffner
00:29:22.960 florence he was not nervous he seemed rather nice and other than he wanted certain things to be done
00:29:32.160 when he asked for his uh just so y'all know fun little fact when he asked for his uh
00:29:36.400 he asked for uh bourbon and seven up and seven up uh he actually paid for it
00:29:43.040 which is kind of funny because it's like oh yeah here you go by the way he's like what the hell bro you
00:29:46.880 got the plane hijacked you're gonna actually pay for your drinks okay fair enough um but he was
00:29:52.720 cordial to the to the staff he wasn't too rude um he was very authoritative like hey i need you guys
00:29:57.280 to do this xyz etc but um his intention was never really to hurt anybody in the staff and they don't
00:30:02.480 even know if the dynamite or anything like that was real so um no no guys he didn't use the stolen
00:30:08.240 money to pay for it this was before he got the money from uh the ransom money he paid for the drink
00:30:14.480 prior he had drank the the bourbon and he was smoking cigarettes yeah that was kind of like one of the
00:30:18.800 things the first things he did like he just asked for a bourbon and a soda and then he started smoking
00:30:25.200 cigarettes yeah he paid for the for the drink you know yeah this is kind of and then he slipped the
00:30:29.920 note to the and then he asked for another one after even after he had the plane under under his command
00:30:36.960 it's crazy to me that he he gave the notes and then he was like yeah i need those notes back
00:30:41.760 you know that he was like yes i need those notes back yeah just so you guys know actually another
00:30:46.080 really smart thing that he did was uh he went after um before he jumped out the plane he told
00:30:52.800 the the lady to give him back all all the notes that he had written all the handwritten notes so the
00:30:57.040 only handwriting sample they have of him guys is is the plane ticket right here where he writes his name
00:31:02.080 in once again boom you're not showing it my bad sorry thank you angie here it is right here guys
00:31:09.680 and let me go ahead and enlarge it for y'all real fast so we can really get a good look at this thing
00:31:13.360 you can see right here dan cooper okay and then they're finding out guys that the name dan cooper
00:31:20.400 came from a comic book series out of canada that was written in french and the main character in it
00:31:27.680 was uh was a military individual i think who would be jumping out of planes and going on missions it was
00:31:33.040 basically a french comic book series based out of canada and that is what led people to believe that there
00:31:38.960 was a high likelihood that db cooper was um at least canadian or familiar with canadian culture
00:31:44.880 and or familiar with this comic book series um and then also what angie said with the uh
00:31:50.000 negotiable u.s currency i mean come on let's be honest here no american's gonna oh bro i need a
00:31:54.560 200 000 negotiable u.s currency now you're gonna say give me 200k motherfucker that's what an american's
00:31:58.880 gonna say but for you to say 200k of a negotiable currency even though they don't have it in print
00:32:03.520 that when they listen to use the word dollars yes yes when when the uh when the pilot was relaying
00:32:10.160 the information and they were listening back to the black box or whatever it may be they saw that
00:32:14.240 the pilot was using that terminology which is strange so that's what led people to think that
00:32:18.560 it's possible that the hijacker was canadian and or potentially dual citizen and also guys they didn't
00:32:24.800 know his his accent was unrecognizable which uh which is very common with with uh you know americans
00:32:30.960 the canadians like unless you like really pay attention um there's only a few words that will
00:32:35.440 distinguish a canadian from an american right a boot right that's one of them i would say that it
00:32:40.240 gives away a canadian all the time i can i cannot tell the difference between the accents yeah like
00:32:45.120 and foreigners like angie that could barely speak english but they're not going to be able to know
00:32:48.720 but yeah there's certain words that canadians say that americans say that you can tell so like my
00:32:52.960 big one that i could tell it's a canadian is they say uh about um what else um did they say a a lot when
00:32:59.360 they finish their sentences uh what else what do you mean what is what eight yeah like they'll when
00:33:05.200 so when they finish they'll be like hey what are your thoughts on that eight oh okay okay yeah and
00:33:10.160 then and they'll that's a common term that a lot of them well eastern canadians i don't even i'm not
00:33:14.560 even sure what what um like canadians from the west coast they uh what some of their terminology is
00:33:20.800 but um but yeah see yeah everyone in the chat i thought canadians will speak like with a strong french
00:33:26.960 accent some of them do if they're from montreal uh from montreal montreal which is eastern canadian
00:33:33.920 eastern canada isn't a cubic or cubic is it that house we're back quebec okay that this this is
00:33:40.800 like the main canadian part that speaks like most french um yeah quebec speaks french and then so does
00:33:47.440 uh montreal okay yeah and then alberta too i guess okay so we got some canadians in the house that might
00:33:52.880 be able to quit yeah so yeah i'm sorry i can't pronounce it yeah all right cool uh let's get
00:33:59.440 back to the to the dock here but yeah guys this is what the the ticket looked like so that's really
00:34:03.280 the only handwriting they have so he was smart enough to know that they were gonna want this um
00:34:07.440 uh at that point cooper samtina muklo to the cockpit told her not to come out he was in the back uh all
00:34:20.640 by himself around 8 12 there was sort of a popping sensation in years of the pilots okay that's when
00:34:30.000 they knew that he had lowered the stairway guys when they heard that popping sound because obviously the
00:34:34.240 pressure in the cabin changed the pressure in the cabin has changed the aft stairs have gone down
00:34:42.720 i told the air traffic controllers that i think our friend just took leave of us
00:34:49.920 to truly appreciate what cooper did close your eyes and take a step and imagine walking down
00:34:57.040 those aft stairs late at night there's a lot of rain guys the conditions that night real quick yeah
00:35:06.640 were horrible that's that was what i was about to say he was wearing a suit okay i even draw it here
00:35:15.520 he was wearing a suit wait show those notes again
00:35:19.920 okay all right he was wearing like and you came prepared yeah i was like i was reading that because he
00:35:25.360 was wearing a suit and um how do you call this like long trench coat yes yeah he also was wearing
00:35:32.640 that and that was it he was not wearing boots he wasn't wearing like warm like warm clothes anything
00:35:39.120 he was just wearing like a suit and this like coat yeah and that's it and he just flew into the
00:35:43.840 wine and and a clip-on tie yeah that he just looked took it off and threw it away on the plane before
00:35:51.280 throwing himself to nothing yeah so yeah he's gonna describe the conditions that night guys it's
00:35:57.520 yeah it's it's wild let's let's see here shots angie w notes you're hearing the engines of this jet in
00:36:04.960 your ear imagine looking out in the middle of the darkness and then walking down another step and
00:36:14.240 another step and just looking out asking yourself the question probably was fully torqued at this
00:36:21.440 point like yes i'm about to pull off the greatest hijacking ever when's the time to jump
00:36:28.240 crazy all right let's go back to the other one because i already know uh netflix be hating so
00:36:45.760 this guy is like a john wick yeah facts he had the john wick suit too
00:36:49.680 yeah all right so now the manhunt begins guys as soon as it became clear that cooper was no longer
00:36:59.920 on board dozens of fbi that's the actual plan you guys could see here huge 727 northwest airlines
00:37:06.880 guy agents converged upon the aircraft only to discover a disappointing amount of physical evidence
00:37:12.880 a black clip-on tie eight cigarette butts and two of the four parachutes were all that cooper left
00:37:21.840 behind evidently he'd brought the ransom and briefcase along with him in interviews conducted
00:37:27.360 on the night of the hijacking cooper was described by the crew and passengers as a white male with brown
00:37:32.480 eyes and dark hair he appeared to be in his mid-40s and wore a dark trench coat a dark suit a white shirt
00:37:39.360 a black tie and dark shoes soon after boarding he'd also don a pair of sunglasses based on this
00:37:45.680 description the fbi produced the first of several composite sketches before they could mount a search
00:37:52.240 however the fbi had to figure out when cooper abandoned the ship but that was easier said than
00:37:57.920 done none of the four crew members witnessed cooper jumping from the plane nor did the pilots of two
00:38:03.520 fighter jets which escorted the flight between seattle and reno which is not
00:38:07.520 and keep in mind guys the fighter jets couldn't go that slow at about 200 miles per hour so it was
00:38:12.880 very difficult for them to keep up with the uh with the plane yeah so that was because they would
00:38:18.160 have to circle it around that's yeah exactly well there's a pricing given it which cooper probably
00:38:24.320 did that on purpose so that because he knew that they were probably going to go ahead and scramble jets
00:38:28.880 around him so he did that on purpose make the plane uh fly low and slow so it would be difficult for
00:38:35.440 the fighter jets to actually witness when he when he jumped out the plane was the middle or see him
00:38:40.320 jump out the plane love the night although the flight crew did report something odd the last
00:38:46.160 communication with the hijacker occurred at approximately 8 to 5 pm when the crew used the
00:38:50.800 intercom to offer assistance which cooper declined within the next 10 minutes the crew experienced what
00:38:56.480 they described as an oscillation or vibration of the aircraft um so we know that he jumped out the
00:39:03.920 plane around 8 10 pm guys at the time the crew suspected it might have been produced by cooper's
00:39:09.760 jump and the subsequent recreation of the hijacking supported that conclusion okay so that took care of
00:39:15.280 the when but what about the where while cooper was very explicit about the flight's configuration and
00:39:20.960 destination he never specified any kind of route in fact cooper grew so impatient with a slow refueling
00:39:27.440 in seattle that he dismissed the captain's request to file a flight plan and simply told him to quote
00:39:32.480 get the show on the road as such the captain chose to fly along an airway known as victor 23
00:39:38.160 without any input from cooper by using victor 23 as a guide authorities estimated the most probable
00:39:44.240 location of the flight at the approximated time of the jump was about 40 kilometers north of portland
00:39:50.080 and so at the break of dawn the fbi mounted an impressive search operation using helicopters
00:39:55.600 airplanes and ground troops so this is the area guys that they cordoned off that they think he
00:39:59.600 could have landed in um which you know obviously they're using the time approximately when he jumped
00:40:05.040 how fast they were going etc if i'm not mistaken the plane was flying at like 170 knots
00:40:10.240 uh the temperature at the time was going the wind was going west if i'm not mistaken and they believe
00:40:15.920 that uh the temperature was uh it was below zero i just can't remember how many degrees below zero
00:40:22.240 but uh but it was cold guys i mean it's november 24th the day before thanksgiving
00:40:26.160 uh in the pacific northwest so you already know it's gonna be freezing god damn it
00:40:32.000 the problem was even if the estimated bailout point was accurate cooper's eventual landing or drop zone was
00:40:39.280 far more difficult to pinpoint the loosely defined search area covered a vast stretch of mountainous
00:40:45.040 wilderness occluded by a dense forest so it was truly like finding a needle in a haystack
00:40:51.200 apart from the difficult terrain the search was further complicated by low temperatures and inclement
00:40:56.400 weather which persisted for days despite their best efforts authorities never managed to find a
00:41:02.400 single trace of cooper nor the items he brought along with him
00:41:05.920 well not until 1980 which we're gonna hear here in a second also guys
00:41:12.480 such a spoiler mike well i'm not gonna say what they found you'll see here in a second and just so
00:41:18.320 you guys know by the way uh the reason why cooper asked for four parachutes guys which was actually
00:41:23.520 really smart 4d chess was because he wanted the fbi to think he was going to take hostages so if
00:41:31.040 they gave him a dummy parachute they would have basically allowed one of the uh victims that he
00:41:36.640 would take hostage with him to die so since he asked for four parachutes they were like damn it we
00:41:41.200 can't go ahead and give him a dummy parachute we got to give him all good parachutes because we don't
00:41:44.640 know who he's going to take with him so that was how he basically created an insurance policy for himself
00:41:51.200 to make sure that they wouldn't give him a dummy parachute and let him fall to his death that's a theory
00:41:56.320 because that was never confirmed but yeah that's a theory that he might have done that and they
00:42:00.560 actually what other reason would it be then because i don't know but that's a theory but
00:42:05.680 they actually gave him a dummy parachute oh no no it was a uh it was a training one but it still worked
00:42:12.880 yeah but they call him dummy parachute i mean dummy isn't like it wouldn't deploy yeah and he they
00:42:17.680 gave him like a civilian luxury parachute and a military parachute that was the one he took
00:42:23.680 as long as we like the dummy parachute yeah yeah he took he took the uh he took the military one
00:42:30.240 and then yeah and the training one but um the training one still worked it just wasn't um
00:42:35.840 as efficient as efficient but it still worked but his fear was well suspected was that they would give
00:42:41.680 him a parachute that doesn't work at all yeah and uh and then he would just fall to his death because
00:42:46.160 the 1970s were different but but uh but that was actually a smart idea for him to ensure that they
00:42:51.840 wouldn't um try to him over yeah this one's also very clever because 200 200 000 guys back then was
00:42:57.440 again that's 1.5 million today's dollars
00:43:10.960 having made little to no progress by early december the fbi turned their attention to the 200 000
00:43:16.720 ransom the money had been collected from the seattle first national bank which maintained
00:43:21.600 a ransom package of 250 000 just for such an occasion so this is also something this is me speculating
00:43:30.080 here okay but for him to ask for 200 000 right that seems like a very specific number as if it would
00:43:38.560 have been able to be given to him fairly quickly and it just so happens that the closest that there's a
00:43:44.800 bank that keeps 200 000 ready to go with oral serial numbers recorded i mean that doesn't sound like
00:43:51.520 that sounds a little bit like too much of a coincidence to me but in twenty dollars bill
00:43:56.000 what are you gonna say in twenty dollars bill and twenty dollar bills so like so it's not like they
00:44:01.040 you know sat there guys that counted it was like okay 200k let's record all the serial numbers no the
00:44:05.200 money bag was pretty much ready to go with all the serial numbers already recorded guys which is why
00:44:09.840 they were able to get it out to him so quickly because of this the serial numbers of the ten
00:44:14.640 thousand twenty dollar bank notes given to cooper had been documented in advance a complete list of
00:44:19.920 which were quickly made available to financial institutions government agencies and the yeah i
00:44:24.480 know some of you guys in the chat are like what the bruh that'd be for the 1970s yeah the 1970s were
00:44:28.400 different guys i guess the bank robberies and ransom was so common they're like all right bro like
00:44:33.520 just just let's just have 50 to 250k just sitting around if some guy makes a crazy demand let's just give him the
00:44:39.440 money it is what it is actually there is a bunch of people that admire this man yeah there's one i'm
00:44:45.600 one of them to be honest with you because this guy is like a what he's just a w like folklore legend
00:44:52.400 yeah and there is a a town near seattle or paul and i don't remember it's called ariel that has like a
00:45:00.880 whole pub that celebrates the damn dan cooper uh db cooper uh day every year one day before
00:45:08.640 thanksgiving and they make like these huge parties where they just celebrate to him and
00:45:13.760 they make toast on his name yeah this is it right here i'll show y'all real fast it's um it's called
00:45:19.360 the ariel uh db cooper tavern yeah the ariel uh ariel in ariel washington oh okay i think this is it right
00:45:27.280 here uh db cooper day at the ariel general store and tavern an annual celebration of the infamous unsolved
00:45:33.600 skyjacking uh because i think where they suspect that he landed was in that area yeah so yeah and
00:45:41.040 people actually like dress like him yes they have a they have a um a competition yeah so you'll see
00:45:47.520 who could get the best db cooper costume which is great and he's a bunch of old people so it's a bunch
00:45:53.440 of people that might have known him and you know like just crazy people to be honest with you americans
00:45:58.720 just be doing crazy shit yeah you know how it is public the intention was to make it as difficult
00:46:04.320 as possible for cooper to spend his money northwest airlines and several newspapers even began to offer
00:46:09.920 rewards to anyone who could find a note with a matching serial number in spite of these efforts
00:46:15.600 no one ever did that is until nearly a decade later in early 1980 a young boy named brian ingram
00:46:25.120 was building a campfire on a small beach in southern washington as he was digging into the
00:46:30.640 sand ingram discovered three bundles of cash totaling five thousand eight hundred and eighty dollars
00:46:36.480 having heard about the infamous can you um yeah i have it here yeah how much that is in today's dollars
00:46:41.920 uh yeah i have it here give me one second the skyjacking ingram's parents brought the severely
00:46:46.400 degraded bundles to the fbi the notes were promptly inspected and sure enough the serial numbers matched
00:46:53.120 those of the ransom boom got it aka it's a match uh so real quick guys i got the actual 1980 uh news
00:47:05.520 clip from when they found the money the break in the nine-year-old investigation came sunday when
00:47:12.720 dwayne and patricia ingram's eight-year-old son overturned some sand while walking the shoreline of
00:47:17.760 the columbia river near vancouver washington the public learned in an fbi news conference tuesday
00:47:23.520 little brian ingram unearthed several packets of deteriorated twenty dollar bills and the fbi confirmed
00:47:29.680 it it was indeed several thousand of the two hundred thousand dollars that bailed out with db cooper
00:47:35.360 on the eve of thanksgiving back in 1971 well we were going to make a campfire and we found it it was
00:47:42.960 partially on top of the ground you know it was just beneath yeah so five hundred uh five thousand
00:47:51.920 eight hundred dollars in 1971 is 43 000 today what about in 1980 can you do it by 1980 1980 because
00:47:59.040 that's when they found it yeah oh okay the sand who found it uh well my son and i found it together
00:48:06.800 i was getting ready to drop the wood and he cleared out the spot and rolled the money over on top of the
00:48:12.080 sand yeah fbi scoured how much 21 000 21 000 wow yeah wow yeah just just uh well the 70s there was
00:48:20.640 really bad inflation so that makes sense uh well okay 20 so 21k yeah the area of the ingrams find
00:48:27.280 at one point a geologist was called in to determine whether money might be buried below the surface
00:48:32.640 level in dredge material deposited on the beach in 1974. on wednesday that geologist confirmed the money
00:48:39.680 washed ashore that meant there could be deposits of money anywhere along a 100 mile stretch of beach
00:48:46.000 searching in the sand on a deserted columbia beach finding bits of money along the high water mark
00:48:51.920 that's what's changed the whole myth of a man named dan cooper people thought he landed on the west side
00:48:57.280 of the range but his money was found to be on the east side that's how it drifted down river and now
00:49:02.640 that's what's changing the whole search and the whole story of db cooper cooper landed where he
00:49:08.720 thought his money might have gone by the lewis river but then it would have had to go against river
00:49:13.200 current to get where it was found people who study river flow are checking if tides could have done it
00:49:17.680 it's doubtful the more logical route from somewhere up river db cooper bailed out of a northwest airlines
00:49:22.960 jet going 200 miles an hour at about 10 000 feet the best guess is he jumped almost exactly over
00:49:28.560 less center washington in fact a placard from the jet was found near there but two things add to the
00:49:33.440 confusion one and the placard from the jet guys was the warning uh from the stairway that he jumped from
00:49:40.640 at that speed seconds mean miles three a minute any delay by cooper from when they thought he jumped
00:49:46.080 puts him further south also he jumped into a major storm at that altitude winds could toss him and drift
00:49:52.000 him for many miles the fbi thought it carried him into lake merwin that was the major search area
00:49:57.360 but now experts feel he might have gone at least over another ridge perhaps into the drainage of the
00:50:02.080 washugal the speculation does lead to excitement are we closer to the secret of db cooper is it
00:50:10.320 somewhere up there the river is a kayaker's joy but it is shallow could it have carried 21 pounds of
00:50:16.880 20 bills miles down its length it did have over eight years to do it and it does flood often this is also
00:50:23.440 rough back country but not as rough as the area around ariel and lake merwin or so the residents
00:50:28.000 tell us maybe a man who landed in a parachute could have made it long time residents are talking about
00:50:33.040 that more again now and about the money that may have flowed through their backyards
00:50:39.920 they don't even fish i doubt it i'd say he's in that columbia river out there
00:50:45.280 this remote country traveling at 200 miles an hour many think cooper was separated from his money and his
00:50:50.320 chute was ripped to shreds leaving him at the mercy of the winds falling but if he didn't make it his
00:50:55.120 remains must be up there somewhere waiting to be found it's doubtful there will be a modern day
00:51:00.160 treasure hunt for it with little or no chance of finding money virtually none of finding anything of
00:51:04.880 cooper's but maybe maybe someone in this area may be thinking more about the ex-skyjacker and may be as
00:51:10.960 lucky as a young vancouver boy was spotting yet another clue in what is now the best guess for cooper's
00:51:16.240 final resting place the washugal drainage basin did dan cooper come tumbling down through these
00:51:21.920 trees in southern washington or was it somewhere else away from the washugal river on that thanksgiving
00:51:26.800 night eight years ago chances are people will continue to look for the legend of db cooper chances
00:51:32.640 though are slim that we'll ever really know the facts but maybe it's better that way crews continue to
00:51:38.480 dig shout out to that 1980s mustache man by the way guys there's 1400 plus y'all watching right now do me a favor
00:51:46.240 ahead and like the video subscribe to the channel oh okay i knew that was coming we uh stream got
00:51:50.960 suspended it's fine i'll probably because we're playing this news thing or we played a little bit
00:51:55.840 of uh the other thing but it's fine it'll we'll be back oh we can do some super chats then uh well
00:52:00.880 they're not even live right now oh okay i'll just tell them don't worry don't worry give us one minute
00:52:08.080 don't worry yeah this is what they do preemptively a lot of the times because this was it's fine this
00:52:18.960 will get shown on the thing yeah it's back now yeah i think we're gonna be back here in a little bit uh
00:52:25.200 but yeah guys first because you guys are gonna watch this back on a playback what youtube does guys is if
00:52:31.360 you play anything what's gonna youtube doesn't know if it's copyrighted or not so what they'll do is
00:52:35.200 they'll temporarily suspend the stream right just out of an abundance of caution and what will end
00:52:40.320 up happening is once the video is fully uploaded and it's all good to go they'll go ahead and uh
00:52:46.160 you know let it play through so when you guys watch this back on the replay don't worry it's gonna all
00:52:51.520 be there because at the end of the day this stuff isn't copyrighted but that's what they do typically
00:52:55.840 when you play videos is they just assume that uh because youtube is them boys yeah youtube is them boys
00:53:03.840 but don't worry guys we're gonna definitely be back here so give it a minute or so uh for the
00:53:09.120 people leaving the the stream man like you guys are impatient yeah it's because they think uh
00:53:15.280 but yeah it'll be back in about what i'm when i time it's normally about two minutes
00:53:19.520 we'll be back in about someone just said i hate youtube and women
00:53:32.240 i was just about to be done playing the thing too this is why we need to go to rumble yeah this is
00:53:38.240 true but don't worry guys we'll be back here in a second and we're back are we back yeah we're back
00:53:43.360 yes okay guys uh you guys missed a little conversation that me and angie had but just to
00:53:47.680 sum it up for y'all don't worry when you guys watch this back on the playback everything is going to
00:53:51.200 show as seen it's just that what youtube does is if you play any type of content that they're not sure
00:53:55.280 about what they'll do is they'll just go ahead and automatically like suspend the stream for a
00:53:59.120 little bit until you go back to playing your regular stuff and then they'll put it back up so don't
00:54:02.960 worry about it um we're back we'll be fine for the rest of the play i'm gonna stop playing that news
00:54:08.160 article but you guys get the idea do me a favor though since i know that they're gonna try to
00:54:12.240 shadow ban this video go ahead like the video subscribe to the channel um and yeah let's get
00:54:17.200 back to it we're gonna go ahead and play um this uh the clip the video from um lamino subscribe to
00:54:27.200 channel if you guys haven't already let me go ahead and put this back up for y'all boom
00:54:30.560 once the excitement subsided however the money managed to raise far more questions than it
00:54:38.480 answered the most significant of which was how how did the money so just to recap you guys um
00:54:44.640 so man gets on a plane uh requests two hundred thousand dollars says that he has a bomb in his
00:54:49.440 briefcase they go ahead they land um where they're in their destination refuel the plane 727 he gets his
00:54:57.520 money he gets four parachutes uh he asked for the parachutes specifically to be four because you
00:55:02.000 know so they would give him good parachutes that would work because they weren't sure if he's going
00:55:04.960 to take hostages he jumps out somewhere in the middle of nowhere um and about almost what nine
00:55:13.920 years later a kid and his dad find the money um right by the beach and just so you guys know by the
00:55:20.320 way here is a photo of the money um and the tie i'll go ahead and share screen with y'all real quick
00:55:26.720 it's on the fbi uh website this is from the official fbi website so here's a clip-on tie that
00:55:32.080 he had which made people think that he might be left-handed because of the way uh that was clipped
00:55:37.200 and then here is the money recovered in 1980 that ran matched the ransom money serial numbers um from
00:55:42.240 the bank that the money was taken from so obviously this is a historical case now so the fbi keeps all
00:55:49.360 this stuff in their museum there is actually uh i don't know i don't remember if it's on because i i
00:55:56.080 guys forgive me if i'm repeating myself in these things because i watch too many documentaries and
00:56:01.200 i don't know which one mentions what so uh there is a theory that there is not a theory that they made
00:56:07.600 us to a study in 2009 i think about the bands the elastic bands that the money was found oh yes
00:56:16.240 yes and i don't know if you saw it but they they like ruled out the theory about he he might have
00:56:24.400 like that that money was found in the water that stuff like it wasn't because the rubber band wouldn't
00:56:29.760 have you know lasted that long underwater or or like you know like natural circumstances like natural
00:56:36.640 environment i don't know i don't know if you can explain it better uh yeah you made zero sense there
00:56:41.360 stupid no i'm just kidding uh basically what she's trying to say guys is that there's a theory that
00:56:45.840 he buried the money versus the money being uh go uh you know flowing through the water etc because the
00:56:51.520 rubber bands that were used to secure the money would not have been able to endure uh the natural
00:56:57.280 elements for that long period of time so there's a theory that db cooper went to that area and
00:57:01.520 specifically buried the money to be found later on that's uh what some people say and there's a lot of
00:57:06.800 conspiracy theories with this case guys right it's not soft this is probably one of the biggest
00:57:12.560 unsolved cases in american history along with the zodiac killer john benet ramsey etc and up so far
00:57:17.920 away from the drop zone i might do a playlist for y'all just on unsolved cases matter of fact now that
00:57:22.320 i think about it looking at this map it might be tempting to think that cooper simply dropped some
00:57:29.440 of the money which then fell into the lewis river the bundles could then have been carried further
00:57:34.160 downstream by the columbia river before finally being washed ashore at tina bar which is the name
00:57:39.840 of the beach tina mucklow tina bar coincidence yeah coincidence anyway the problem with this idea is
00:57:47.600 that the columbia river flows in the opposite direction this has led some including members of
00:57:53.520 the fbi to re-evaluate initial drop zone assessment for instance if the drop zone was much further southeast
00:58:00.560 close to a river called the washugal river it is conceivable albeit improbable that the money floated
00:58:06.800 all the way down also uh stellar rise makes a good comment here db cooper escaped yet yo he was an
00:58:11.840 experienced jumper who also knew the area he recognized tacoma from the sky he was very calm
00:58:15.920 and used terminologies because that suggests experience around aircraft yes he also recognized
00:58:20.800 the military base as well while they were circling around waiting for the money to be uh to be gathered
00:58:26.560 he also recognized the military base and area as well so and he picked a military parachute which
00:58:31.440 led um people to believe that he was potentially a paratrooper back in the day so he also mentioned that
00:58:37.520 the air force base was like about 20 20 minutes right from the airport is that what you said uh no
00:58:44.800 he saw from the sky i didn't know about the him saying it was a 20 minute drive to the to the girl
00:58:50.000 to this to the to the lady that that the mach sure mach sure i think it's called the air for base
00:58:56.480 was only 20 minutes it wasn't a 20 minute drive from the from the airport that they were gonna land in
00:59:01.520 seattle okay and he saw from the sky too so he knew where he was at guys he was very familiar with the
00:59:06.960 northwest the pacific northwest for sure to tina bar alternatively the bundles may have simply landed on
00:59:13.920 the beach if the flight path was further to the west even so natural explanations struggle to
00:59:20.480 explain how three independent potentially free-falling and or free-floating bundles of cash ended up at
00:59:27.120 exact same place on the same beach to complicate matters sediment from the riverbed was excavated
00:59:34.080 and dumped onto tina bar as part of a dredging operation in 1974 and according to one analysis the
00:59:40.160 money was discovered above this layer of sediment if true that would mean the money came to rest at
00:59:45.600 tina bar sometime after 1974. but a re-examination of that analysis found that what was believed to
00:59:52.320 be a layer of deposited sediment might actually have been a perfectly natural layer of clay not only that
00:59:58.080 but the sediment was clearly dumped some distance away from where the money was discovered furthermore when
01:00:03.600 ingram discovered the bundles the rubber bands which held them to uh making sure that we're still good
01:00:13.120 okay it looks like we're still live okay just making sure because someone put in the chat stream unavailable
01:00:18.320 or some crap like that guys you can't you can't mess around like that because then you hurt the crowd
01:00:22.880 of the show for everybody else because i just pause it randomly to make sure so please no trolling
01:00:28.240 gather were still intact this is significant because experiments conducted in 2009 revealed that this
01:00:34.320 brand of rubber bands could not withstand exposure to open air or water for more than a year this is
01:00:40.800 what angie was trying to describe for you guys yeah so unless the bundles were somehow protected from
01:00:45.840 the elements they must have become buried at tina bar within a year after hijacking the most probable
01:00:51.920 explanation therefore seems to be that cooper or someone else deliberately buried the money did
01:00:58.800 cooper survive and bury the money himself did someone else bury the money after stumbling
01:01:03.440 upon cooper's remains if there is an explanation which does not require human intervention
01:01:09.200 it's managed to elude investigators for decades suffice it to say this is a mystery within a mystery
01:01:16.080 since ingram's discovery in 1980 both tina bar and the grounds around the washugal river have been
01:01:22.960 subjected to numerous searches but to date there's been no sign of cooper nor the rest of the money
01:01:35.760 so now we're gonna get into the suspects guys um i think this is yeah this chapter is the suspects
01:01:42.480 from the very beginning it was assumed by many that cooper did not survive his daring escape
01:01:52.480 and don't worry guys i'm gonna go into the theory of why he potentially did not survive uh the jump as
01:01:58.240 well i'm gonna play another video from national geographic where um one of the scientists goes
01:02:03.760 into his theory on what he thinks happened and you know we'll present both sides for you guys and you guys
01:02:07.840 can go ahead and decide what you want but i think it's important to present all the sides and then you go
01:02:12.240 from there it would not make for a very thrilling conclusion to this story but that's the thing about stories
01:02:18.800 they're usually far more exciting than reality while there is no hard evidence for nor against cooper's
01:02:24.960 survival the assumption that he fell to his death is not without merit when cooper leaped into the
01:02:30.560 darkness flight 305 was plowing through a frigid rainstorm at roughly 170 knots 10 000 feet above
01:02:37.280 southern washington the wind was so violent that it ripped out a placard from the aft stairway which
01:02:43.120 was late it recovered in and that's what and when we're watching that news article by the way guys
01:02:49.280 that's what was found by another person in that same area uh and later on two years later in 78 almost
01:02:56.400 directly below the estimated flight path to say that cooper was not dressed for the occasion it would be an
01:03:02.480 understatement the ground beneath him meanwhile was obscured by multiple layers of clouds which likely
01:03:08.480 means that cooper jumped without knowing his precise location even if he could see the ground and had a
01:03:14.400 specific drop zone in mind the parachute he selected was non-steerable meaning he would not have been able
01:03:20.240 to steer his descent towards a specific landing spot thus for clear that's very important guys because
01:03:25.600 that means that he would have been at the mercy of the winds which if i'm not mistaken that night
01:03:29.360 we're going in a westerly uh direction any potential coordination with an accomplice stationed on the
01:03:35.360 ground while cooper expressed some familiarity with parachutes his actual competence level is up for
01:03:42.320 the bait it's widely believed that cooper demanded two pairs of parachutes two primary and two reserve
01:03:48.320 to make the authorities believe that they intended to take a hostage that is precisely what happened
01:03:52.960 as the fbi contemplated but eventually decided against sabotaging the shoots as they did not want
01:03:58.000 to risk the life of an innocent civilian but in their haste to obtain them they unintentionally
01:04:03.120 provided cooper with a non-functional dummy shoot intended for training purposes this mishap seems to
01:04:09.040 have gone unnoticed by cooper because that dummy shoot was one of the two missing from the plane not
01:04:14.880 only that but cooper chose the older and technically inferior parachute out of the two provided well
01:04:21.520 is that you drew that as well no actually you know what angie it looks like you're right the one of them
01:04:26.480 was a training dummy shoe but i don't know if that means it works yeah wait go ahead show that to
01:04:31.040 the thing again to the audience so uh okay yeah yeah for trade so someone someone in the in the chat if
01:04:37.520 anyone here is a is a uh i do this here this thing money like the money signs because that's what he
01:04:44.320 put the money he put yeah yeah guys anyone here that's uh um that die that jumps out of planes or
01:04:51.280 anything like that is a parachuter let us know if a dummy shoot still deploys like if you can still use
01:04:55.920 it if it's for training purposes that means it's got to work like it's not like it's gonna like like
01:04:59.920 like not deploy and the person just falls to their death it probably just isn't as efficient but uh let me
01:05:05.200 know guys yeah thing is that the parachute that he used the military one was uh was a backpack and
01:05:12.400 that was a difference between the others i think gotcha gotcha okay so in both cases it seems like
01:05:19.120 cooper made the worst possible choice but there are other ways to interpret this information for instance
01:05:26.640 it's possible that cooper used the dummy shoot not as a reserve but as a means to secure the bag of
01:05:32.080 money in fact that is precisely what cooper tried to do with a functional reserve shoot first he tried
01:05:37.600 to place the money in the chutes canopy before removing some of the suspension lines and wrap
01:05:42.160 them around the bag perhaps he used the dummy shoot for a similar purpose and cooper's decision to use
01:05:47.760 the older primary shoot is not necessarily an indication of inexperience it could also be a sign of
01:05:53.120 familiarity because the shoot he left behind was a civilian luxury shoot while the one he used was a
01:05:59.280 military shoot so that right there guys okay let people to believe that he was a military guy because
01:06:08.080 um the primary shoot that you guys could see here was actually better quality however he might have not
01:06:13.200 been familiar with it and he said okay you know what let me go with what i know it might not be as nice
01:06:17.200 but i know how to operate this so and you know human beings typically like to go the path of least
01:06:21.760 resistance and what they know so you know i i would i mean if i was in his shoes i would go with a
01:06:26.400 shoe obviously that i'm more familiar with versus a better one because i know how to use the thing
01:06:30.800 the thing with the military one it was it was that it was harder to pull off yes than the other one
01:06:35.920 because it was more like methodical yes yes it was yeah the argument is that cooper might have been
01:06:42.160 trained as say a paratrooper and chose the older military shoot because that's the one with which he
01:06:47.520 was most familiar and there is at least one other reason to suspect that cooper had a military background
01:06:54.400 while the flight was in a holding pattern near seattle cooper mentioned that the mccord air force
01:06:58.960 base was only 20 minutes away from the seattle tacoma airport at the time that was an accurate
01:07:06.800 assessment and might suggest a military background apart from the potential military connections cooper
01:07:13.120 may even have had links to the central intelligence agency you see the type of aircraft which cooper chose
01:07:18.480 to hijack a boeing 727 was also used by the cia to covertly drop agents and supplies during the vietnam
01:07:25.680 war a task for which the 727 was uniquely qualified due to its distinctive aft stairway so it's fairly
01:07:33.280 safe to assume that cooper chose to hijack a boeing 727 specifically because it provided a relatively
01:07:38.880 safe means of escape whether he learned of this from the cia or came to that conclusion independently
01:07:45.120 is another question however the fact that cooper chose to hijack a flight operated by northwest
01:07:50.400 airlines was apparently random chance when tina mucklow asked cooper about his motives he responded
01:07:56.880 it's not because i have a grudge towards your airline it's just because i have a grudge he further
01:08:02.640 clarified that flight 305 just happened to be in the right place at the right time and he could
01:08:08.960 have said that to maybe divert you know from where his you know his real angle because uh as you guys
01:08:13.760 are going to see with some of the suspects one of them definitely had a bone to pick with northwest
01:08:17.520 airlines um which also guys do me a favor uh there's 1600 you guys watching right now we had 1400
01:08:23.760 before the stream went down which kind of sucks i don't know where they all went but do me a favor
01:08:27.440 guys like the video let's get to 1 000 likes it helps with the engagement quite a bit as y'all know
01:08:32.400 this channel is somewhat shadow banned i would say um so go ahead and let's get to 1 000 likes because the
01:08:37.920 likes and get help with engagement engagement increases the video's power and the algorithm
01:08:42.560 the more likes the more comments the more engagement the more the video gets shown
01:08:46.400 to other people that can go ahead and you know enjoy the channel we can have a army of uh true
01:08:51.440 crimers and sleuths joining under one umbrella for fed reacts because we are the best true crime channel
01:08:56.080 on youtube by far i think we're better than everybody else because we don't have to put makeup on our
01:08:59.920 to go ahead and get views we give you all the real sauce all right god damn it so like the
01:09:05.120 goddamn video subscribe to the channel if you haven't already and uh follow us on instagram as
01:09:09.120 well at fed reacts on instagram even so it's clear that cooper came prepared he seemed to know a great
01:09:15.840 deal about aircraft and aviation he appeared to be familiar with the local terrain he maintained a low
01:09:21.280 profile to avoid a panic he covered his eyes with a pair of glasses to conceal his identity he left very
01:09:27.040 little evidence behind and he demanded four parachutes to force the assumption that he was taking hostage
01:09:33.280 he was even cunning enough to reclaim the note which he'd initially given to florence schaffner
01:09:38.880 very smart apart from the name he wrote on his plane ticket there are no other samples of cooper's
01:09:44.080 handwriting but for all his planning and cunning it seems cooper did not give enough thought to his
01:09:51.040 eventual escape not only did he fail to specify a route but he was forced to make a last minute
01:09:56.400 destination change from mexico city to reno he could have demanded more appropriate parachuting equipment
01:10:02.160 like a pair of boots a helmet or jumpsuit he could even have specified the ransom to be delivered in
01:10:07.280 larger denominations to make it lighter and less cumbersome to carry presuming he did survive the fall
01:10:13.520 and made it safely to the ground he may then have had to and real quick guys here are the actual um
01:10:18.960 photographs of the shoot that was given to him you can see here the canvas bag that contained one of the
01:10:24.000 parachutes given to db cooper in 1971 oh let me enlarge it real fast
01:10:31.920 uh he jumped with two including one that was used for instruction and had been sewn shut he used the
01:10:37.760 cord from one of the remaining parachutes to tie the stolen money bag shut one of the unused parachutes
01:10:42.640 requested but never used an fbi so-called norjack case so um and these are on display at the at the fbi
01:10:49.760 museum uh to this day that's crazy make his way through a dense partially snow-covered forest in
01:10:59.520 nothing but loafers and a trench coat in late november i get the distinct impression that cooper's escape
01:11:06.240 was much more of a leap of faith than a carefully executed job drawing right there just on the other
01:11:11.760 hand it scares me a lot because that that thing right there like that that gift right there it's
01:11:17.840 just crazy because can you imagine just jumping off a plane i just get terrified with turbulences yeah i
01:11:24.160 mean yeah oh yeah that's true you actually do she gets sick guys in the plane you get sick every time
01:11:29.040 i'm on a plane and i can't imagine a person i like jumping off a plane i just just can't make
01:11:34.320 get my get my especially in 1970s like the planes weren't as nice as they are now it's cold as hell
01:11:40.000 the wind is going crazy the plane's going 170 knots you you're you know you're you're 10 000
01:11:45.680 feet above ground so it's not as bad as jumping from a higher altitude but regardless like you
01:11:50.400 can't see anything it's pitch black yeah you know so it's windy cold and he doesn't even know where
01:11:55.600 he's jumping out of like it's it's it's wild that he like said you know what screw it i'm just gonna
01:11:59.600 jump out so um it's either prison or or jumping out in the middle of nowhere so he i guess he decided
01:12:05.760 to jump out of nowhere so because you guys could clearly see that wasn't planned because he
01:12:09.760 wanted to go to mexico city couldn't do that thought about yuma or phoenix or any of these
01:12:13.440 other places couldn't do that so he's like you know what screw it we're on the way to reno i'm
01:12:16.720 just gonna jump out yeah authorities never received a missing persons report matching the description of
01:12:21.840 cooper in the wake of the hijacking this might suggest that cooper did survive and that he swiftly
01:12:28.640 and quietly resumed his normal routine furthermore other hijackers have performed similar stunts
01:12:35.040 and many of them did survive even if they were quickly apprehended finally the simplest explanation
01:12:40.640 for how three bundles of cash ended up at tina bar is human intervention at the end of the day most of
01:12:47.200 this is based on nothing but supposition without any concrete evidence of cooper's demise it leaves the
01:12:53.360 door wide open to the far more exciting proposition that he did in fact survive
01:13:01.040 i hope he did
01:13:05.280 all right now they're going to get into the suspects before we get into the suspects guys
01:13:08.240 let's go ahead and um read some of these chats that came through um we got here let me pull it
01:13:15.680 oh yeah you got it db cooper ledger for avoiding that 304 flight he could handle heists and high stakes
01:13:20.960 but not them whores okay i appreciate that sir uh angie gains oh come on no we're not reading that
01:13:26.880 shit go back go back go back people you should stop making just this lame ass things seriously why
01:13:34.560 would you spend ten dollars just to make a false account like this is why i went private on instagram
01:13:40.720 you guys because you guys are crazy like him and i just went on reddit and read a bunch of
01:13:45.680 shit you guys have been grinding in there and we just just suddenly became paranoid of everything
01:13:51.360 like of social media we wanted to close everything like everything at all because you guys are crazy
01:13:56.720 you be clipping my my stories and like commenting on my post like my family is there and you need to
01:14:03.200 understand like what the hell is wrong with you stop god damn it she got her don't read that sucks to
01:14:12.240 suck kim poppy mine says i'm the number one wife don't worry you can have this seat back next week
01:14:16.880 i'm keeping it warm for you i'll take back my rifle spot on the controls and keys and then we got here
01:14:23.760 and delay two bucks appreciate that amiri goes i've been watching all the fnf episodes of chronological
01:14:28.640 order since i found john january 2022 i just finished the hater called in to g check this
01:14:33.200 episode where you turn into a blood named byron bro byron i haven't seen him in a while what happened
01:14:38.080 he's in jail uh andy lie two dollars appreciate that uh uh oh got that one okay uh bloody chigger
01:14:45.120 goes i used to watch lamino all the time mostly voice on youtube pause you said sleep to it pause again
01:14:51.200 my old world and new world colliding w got you my friend don't worry about it and you like goes again
01:14:55.680 you should do a case on pizzagate and andrena chrome speaking of pizzagate you guys need to
01:15:00.800 go watch the episode that we did on the pizza bomber that was lit we spent quite a bit of
01:15:04.160 time researching that one it's probably one of my favorite ones we did too because that was a
01:15:07.200 really weird case on some salt again we get cancelled on fatty the what the pizza what the
01:15:12.720 pizza gate will get cancelled immediately i don't know what the pizza gate one is it's a theory on
01:15:18.720 jeffrey epston and a bunch of shit like all together okay and the boys okay yeah hi marion when will
01:15:23.600 ryan dawson make his highly anticipated return we will do ryan dawson um probably next week guys
01:15:28.400 don't worry um he had some family stuff they had to deal with so that's why we couldn't do the 9 11
01:15:32.640 part too i heard destiny make an appearance on june 2nd i didn't hear anything about making an
01:15:37.600 appearance yeah making appearance i didn't hear anything about that uh just jumping on i was
01:15:41.360 getting a workout and then listening to dj santana all right fair enough my friend uh and that's from
01:15:45.840 who bob shout to you bob uh can you do a breakdown in 1980 iranian embassy siege uh yes i think we can i
01:15:51.600 think there was a movie that was based on that with ben affleck it was an argo or something like
01:15:54.800 that that's so good yeah i think it was that movie that was based on that situation uh cooper was
01:16:01.040 probably one of them boys okay that's from rob uh and then darnell elliott mr gate oh miss gains the
01:16:07.680 the of the airbase i think it means the airbase you mentioned was called mccord air force base about
01:16:12.720 30 minutes from uh sea tack the army base was fort lewis i was there from 0609 oh now now known as jb
01:16:19.600 lewis mccord okay now i think he said that before we pulled it up on the documentary okay thank you
01:16:24.560 for that that thing uh well so we got here bloody checker goes in english please angie okay uh and what
01:16:32.960 uh goes the tv show prison break touches on the theory that he hurt his leg while landing buried
01:16:37.680 the money hit a girl with a stolen car and went to prison okay what hey as a prior military you should
01:16:43.920 do some other big military crimes also l youtube oh don't worry guys we're back i figured youtube
01:16:48.560 might do that so we're back i i was prepared and again guys whenever it's just stream suspended when
01:16:54.320 we put it back on the playback it's gonna show that part that was suspended so don't worry i got
01:16:58.320 you i always put that in the timestamps as well uh what else caught up yep all right cool so we're
01:17:03.840 gonna go ahead guys and go into the suspects and then we'll go into the other theory of what they think
01:17:09.840 potentially could have happened by the time the press got wind of the hijacking the fbi had
01:17:17.040 already begun to investigate a few potential suspects among them was a man in portland with
01:17:22.160 initials db and surname cooper this cooper was quickly eliminated as a yeah it wasn't that easy
01:17:28.400 fbi come on man but due to a mix-up by the press the name dan cooper was confused for db cooper and the
01:17:35.760 rest is history yeah so basically a reporter that didn't pay attention to detail guys put db cooper
01:17:41.360 in the press release and then they just stuck because it sounded a lot cooler than dan cooper uh
01:17:46.240 nowhere in the investigation did they use the term db cooper it's just a reporter that put it that way
01:17:52.320 and then bam they said you know what that's the moniker we're gonna stick with it it is what it is
01:17:56.880 while dan cooper is most likely a pseudonym there is a comic book series of the same name the comic is
01:18:03.280 written in french and centers around a canadian pilot named dan cooper while the comic was not
01:18:08.480 translated into english nor sold in the united states before 1971 it was available in canada
01:18:14.480 which has a large french-speaking population given that american and canadian accents can be difficult
01:18:20.400 to distinguish besides certain terms like i told you before like a boot and stuff like that this is
01:18:26.320 what leads people to suspect that um cooper was potentially canadian and or had ties to canada
01:18:32.720 because this comic book was not in the united states prior to 1971 and it was written in french
01:18:37.520 only it's possible that cooper who was described as having no discernible accent was a bilingual
01:18:44.480 canadian this might even be supported by something that cooper might have said before we get into that
01:18:50.480 guys do me a favor we only got 835 likes yet we got 1100 plus you guys in here smash that like button
01:18:56.400 subscribe to the channel because as y'all could see youtube is trying to throttle us in the algorithm
01:19:00.720 hating on the stream so like the video guys let's get get it up in the algorithm so more people can
01:19:05.280 find this type of content because this is going to be the best stevie cooper breakdown on youtube
01:19:09.760 because we're showing y'all all angles yes sir when the captain relayed cooper's demands to air traffic
01:19:14.800 control he used the phrase negotiable american currency it seems doubtful that an american citizen
01:19:21.520 would specify american currency so perhaps cooper yeah i'll tell you this jamal ain't robbing a bank
01:19:27.360 and say hey i need the gospel denominations of u.s currency right now okay or else you're gonna get
01:19:33.360 the so yeah definitely some type of that a foreigner would say that's not american the problem is we
01:19:40.560 don't know if this is a direct quote from cooper or paraphrasing by the captain for instance notes taken
01:19:47.440 by the crew during the hijacking merely contained the phrase negotiable currency while testimonies
01:19:52.800 provided by the crew after the hijacking include phrases like 200 000 in cash and circulated a u.s
01:20:00.000 currency so cooper might have been canadian and he might have taken his name from the dan cooper comics
01:20:06.800 just as he might have been american and might have taken his name from something or someone else
01:20:11.600 that's nearly half a century has gone by since the hijacking took place and in that time thousands
01:20:18.160 of suspects have been questioned and investigated it would obviously be impossible to cover all of
01:20:23.200 them here but let's take a look at some of the people that at some point or another have been
01:20:27.840 suspected of being db cooper and these are pretty much all the top suspects in the investigation guys
01:20:33.120 that we're going to go through um so and i think some of you guys actually mentioned some of their
01:20:36.800 names uh earlier in the chat some of y'all said mccoy etc so let's see what could have been
01:20:41.520 implicated them and what actually ended up exonerating them
01:20:50.320 robert rackstraw first became a suspect in 1978 and on the surface he seems like a solid candidate
01:20:57.040 he was a decorated army paratrooper and helicopter pilot he had experience with explosives he had an
01:21:03.280 extensive criminal record he had an uncle named john cooper who was an avid skydiver he was expelled
01:21:10.080 from the army only months before the hijacking which might suggest a motive after all the hijacker did
01:21:15.920 say he had a grudge when confronted by journalists and private investigators rackstraw would neither
01:21:22.080 confirm nor outright deny that he was db cooper instead he'd say things like i could have been or i
01:21:28.000 would not discount myself on the other hand rackstraw had light colored eyes which cooper did not more
01:21:35.760 significantly rackstraw was only 28 years of age at the time of the hijacking this is well outside
01:21:41.920 a range of ages reported by the crew and passengers most of whom believed cooper was in his mid-40s
01:21:51.680 kenneth christiansen first became a suspect in 2003 when his brother noticed certain parallels
01:21:57.600 between him and cooper christiansen had briefly served he does look like him quite a bit though from
01:22:02.640 that photo as a paratrooper in world war ii and since 1953 he'd worked for northwest airlines as
01:22:08.480 both a mechanic and a flight attendant he was 45 years old at the time of the hijacking he was
01:22:14.320 left-handed which cooper might have been for instance cooper used his left hand to interact
01:22:19.040 with his briefcase and the clip-on tie he left on board was affixed with a tight clasp applied from
01:22:23.840 the left shortly before he died in 1994 christiansen had supposedly told his brother there is something
01:22:30.160 you should know but i cannot tell you after his passing his family discovered over two hundred
01:22:35.760 thousand dollars in his bank accounts to top it all off florence schaffner stated that photographs of
01:22:41.680 christiansen bore a strong resemblance to cooper on the other hand christiansen did not match the
01:22:48.640 physical description of cooper he was both shorter and lighter while schaffner did see a strong
01:22:54.560 resemblance she remarked that cooper had more hair and that is supported by the composite sketches
01:23:00.880 and there was nothing suspicious about the large sums of money which he'd simply earned by selling land
01:23:07.440 but guys i will say this right after the hijacking uh and i think december of 1971 or so people did
01:23:15.040 see that he had a big amount of money around two hundred thousand dollars uh in his bank account and
01:23:20.160 also he bought a house cash guys right after that hijacking and he was mad because the airline right
01:23:27.760 kept getting strikes given after them right um the uh north northwest airline they kept getting
01:23:33.600 strikes given to them and that his ability up to basically work and make money so he was pissed
01:23:38.240 off and he had to do odd jobs like digging ditches etc to make ends meet so he definitely had a bone to
01:23:43.440 pick with the airline um and he was only earning about 150 a week back then in 1971 so for him to
01:23:51.680 save up almost 200 000 in cash and buy a home cash um highly improbable especially the way he was able
01:23:58.160 to do it so quickly and if you guys see from the photos he looks a lot like him let's go back real
01:24:03.200 quick i'll show y'all 150 dollars back then was a thousand and a hundred eleven hundred eleven hundred so
01:24:10.240 look i mean look at the resemblance here he i would say by far looks the most like since 1950
01:24:14.560 db cooper and had briefly served hold on him a suspect in 2003 when his brother noted and also
01:24:22.080 guys he know he knew um the routes very well and he knew about the airplanes very well as well so um
01:24:29.840 you know the way that he was able to strategize everything else like that was very telling of
01:24:33.840 someone that could have potentially worked for this company also the ones that ended up paying that 200k
01:24:38.880 i think it was the airline themselves that paid that 200 000. how would he have known that they
01:24:43.280 would have that money ready to go i don't know you know so there's a lot of coincidences there the
01:24:48.640 thing with him is that everyone that saw actually saw db cooper rule him out no no no it was the next
01:24:55.360 guy that they're gonna rule out not him they they say that he actually looked the most like db cooper
01:25:00.160 but this guy okay you're gonna see the i did the next you're thinking of the next guy that they're
01:25:03.760 gonna rule out that he didn't look like or no yeah uh the next guy the next guy didn't look like
01:25:08.160 him you'll see here of the of the edges here yeah they said that like they remember cooper having more
01:25:14.160 hair but he definitely has the most uh the face that looks the most i mean hell look at the pictures
01:25:19.440 guys so um we'll see here in a second this brain and a flight attendant he was 45 since cooper used his
01:25:27.920 left hand oh and then the ping also this guy was about five foot eight and they had db cooper at about
01:25:32.480 five foot ten or six foot that was another thing that they said hey we don't know if that's him
01:25:36.320 applied from the left shortly before he died in 1994 tell you after his passing his family
01:25:42.480 discovered over two hundred thousand dollars in his bank accounts to top it all off florence
01:25:48.160 schaffner stated that photographs of christiansen bore a strong resemblance to cooper on the other hand
01:25:55.120 christiansen did not match the physical description of cooper he was both shorter and lighter while
01:26:01.440 schaffner did see a strong resemblance she remarked that cooper had more hair and that is supported
01:26:07.280 by the composite sketches yeah so he did have a strong resemblance from the witnesses but just the
01:26:11.280 hair is the only thing that was off and there was nothing suspicious about the large sums of money
01:26:16.000 which he'd simply earned by selling land richard mccoy first became a suspect in 1972 when he hijacked a
01:26:25.680 Boeing 727 and escaped via the aft stairway much like db cooper because of the significant overlap
01:26:32.400 between the two hijackings this is a guy that was very favored to be the uh db cooper some believe
01:26:39.040 they must have been committed by the same person mccoy used a fake name he used a fake hand grenade to
01:26:44.800 threaten the crew he used handwritten notes to issue his demands both mccoy and cooper used the phrase
01:26:51.040 no funny stuff as a warning to the crew mccoy demanded 500 000 in cash and four parachutes mccoy
01:26:58.880 also bailed out the back of the plane once they passed over his hometown in the state of utah apart
01:27:04.000 from the similar modus operandi mccoy had also served in the vietnam war as a demolitions expert
01:27:09.040 and a helicopter pilot mccoy did actually survive the fall and managed to evade authorities for two full
01:27:15.360 days before he was apprehended and sentenced to 45 years in prison before his death in 1974 mccoy
01:27:21.760 refused to confirm or deny that he was db cooper on the other hand mccoy was an avid recreational
01:27:28.240 skydiver and even came prepared with a skydiving helmet and jumpsuit he gave very specific instructions
01:27:34.720 about the flight path in addition to the fake hand grenade mccoy also used an unloaded handgun to
01:27:39.680 threaten the crew he failed to retrieve one of the notes he'd given to a flight attendant
01:27:44.400 he was only 29 years of age at the time of the hijacking and all three flight attendants were
01:27:50.000 quite certain that mccoy was not cooper yeah so they basically said no that's not him he doesn't
01:27:55.760 look like him at all while there are meaningful parallels between these two cases mccoy might
01:28:00.800 simply have been a copycat who'd read about db cooper in the news i think that's the most plausible uh
01:28:06.800 explanation i mean he didn't even he didn't even like deny it like so you could already tell oh yeah
01:28:14.160 clout i want the clout fuck it because this was a huge story back then guys main weber first became
01:28:19.680 a suspect in 1995 when shortly before his death he supposedly told his wife i've got a secret to
01:28:25.680 tell you i am dan cooper following his deathbed oh here we go another one confession weber's widow
01:28:31.680 recalled a number of fascinating details she claims to have found a bank bag resembling the one used in
01:28:36.720 the hijacking she claims weber had sustained a knee injury after jumping out of a plane weber supposedly had
01:28:42.560 a nightmare about leaving his fingerprints on the aft stairs and a year before the money was discovered
01:28:48.000 at tina bar weber had allegedly paid a quick visit to the same location in addition weber was a world
01:28:54.080 war ii veteran he had an extensive criminal record he matched the physical description and he was 47
01:29:00.080 years old in 1971. on the other hand weber's fingerprints did not match any of the prints collected
01:29:07.600 from flight 305 although to be fair there's no way to know if any of those prints actually belonged to
01:29:13.280 cooper furthermore weber's dna did not match a dna sample collected from the tie clasp but once again
01:29:20.080 there's no way to know if the dna on the tie clasp actually came from the hijacker and not someone else
01:29:26.160 what's so frustrating is that the fbi likely had a much better source of dna at one point if you recall
01:29:32.000 eight cigarette butts were collected from the scene and there's a good chance they were all suffused with
01:29:36.560 cooper's dna the problem is that evidence was lost at some point oh man shout out to the fbi now going
01:29:49.120 to be called for the rest of the podcast as the lvi god damn bro and they would have definitely been
01:29:55.920 able to go ahead and use that dna and potentially find out who he is at least they would have had a
01:29:59.920 legit dna profile of the um hijacker man and they lost it uh department of justice goes uh yeah i lost
01:30:08.000 my ass oh man lvi and absence and the fbi is crying yeah william smith first became a suspect in 2018
01:30:21.120 smith served in the navy during world war ii and likely had some experience with parachuting
01:30:26.160 he was 43 years old at the time of the high what do you put lost bureau of investigation
01:30:41.600 now that's funny yo lost bureau of investigation what the bro
01:30:47.440 jacking he had dark brown eyes he matched the physical description he shared a certain likeness
01:30:57.600 with the composite sketches even fbi finds that funny
01:31:04.480 and the department of justice oh my god especially this speculative sketch of an older db cooper
01:31:10.960 a student named ira daniel cooper who was killed in world war ii like the video guys i only see 878
01:31:17.600 likes but we're getting all these laughs over here guys like the video subscribe to the channel man if
01:31:21.360 you haven't already but at least like the video let's get this thing to 1000 likes man so i can
01:31:24.640 stop asking god damn it attended the same high school as smith smith worked as a yardmaster for
01:31:30.640 a railroad company for most of his life but in 1970 the company filed for bankruptcy as a consequence
01:31:36.960 smith lost his pension which might suggest a motive he could for instance have developed a grudge
01:31:42.720 towards the airline industry for the role in bringing about the downfall of the rail transportation
01:31:47.040 industry it's further speculated that smith could have used his knowledge of railroad networks to
01:31:52.080 hop on a train and escape undetected on the other hand smith spent his entire life in the northeastern
01:31:59.440 united states given that the hijacking occurred on the other side of the country and was committed by
01:32:04.960 someone who at least appeared to be familiar with the local terrain smith is not the most ideal
01:32:10.400 candidate however the fact that smith worked as a yardmaster is interesting you see the tie that
01:32:16.960 cooper left behind was recently examined using an electron microscope which uncovered various
01:32:22.240 metallic particles some of these particles especially yeah yeah very interesting pure titanium were quite rare
01:32:29.040 in 1971. this might suggest that cooper worked as a manager at some sort of chemical or metallurgical
01:32:36.240 facility or possibly a rail yard also they knew that the tie came from jc penny because jc penny was the
01:32:43.440 only place i think from the 1960s up until the early 1970s that carried that clip on tie so uh that's another
01:32:50.320 little link there as well
01:32:58.560 if nothing else i hope this limited selection of suspects illustrates just how difficult it is to be
01:33:04.320 certain when you have so little evidence to work with these five individuals look nothing alike
01:33:11.040 yet any one of them could be d.d cooper was cooper really in his mid-40s or did he simply look old for
01:33:17.840 his age did cooper really serve in the military which one of these sketches most closely resemble cooper
01:33:25.440 in 2016 the fbi had to admit defeat and officially closed down the case and this is uh their official
01:33:31.840 statement it goes update on investigation of 1971 hijacking by db cooper also just so you guys know
01:33:36.560 as far as the cigarette butts go back in 1971 there was no dna guys so they probably didn't take it as
01:33:42.240 seriously back in the 70s because they're like what the hell is dna gonna do you know what i mean they
01:33:46.000 didn't even know what it was really so dna didn't become a thing guys until damn near the 90s into
01:33:51.600 the 2000s that's how they were able to catch the golden state killer and btk um because dna technology
01:33:57.040 really wasn't used in court in the court system until i think the first official prosecution was
01:34:00.880 sometime in the late 80s or 90s and then they didn't actually streamline using dna and criminal
01:34:04.880 investigations until the 2000s so you know in 1971 fbi just back then you know for living living under a
01:34:12.480 rock now understanding the power of dna in the future uh but here's their statement that they
01:34:16.400 gave update on investigation on 1971 hijacking by db cooper quote following one of the longest and
01:34:21.440 most exhaustive investigations in our history on july 8 2016 the fbi redirected resources allocated to db
01:34:27.040 cooper case in order to focus on other investigative priorities priorities during the course of the 45
01:34:32.560 year norjack investigation the fbi exhaustively reviewed all credible leads coordinated between
01:34:37.280 multiple field offices to conduct searches collected all available evidence and interviewed all
01:34:41.760 identified witnesses over the years the fbi has applied numerous new and innovative investigative
01:34:46.000 techniques as well as examined countless items at the fbi laboratory evidence obtained during the
01:34:50.800 course of the investigation will now be preserved for historical purposes at the fbi headquarters in
01:34:56.160 washington dc that's a fancy way of saying yeah um i don't know if you know mary but uh well you
01:35:02.800 might know but uh i read somewhere i saw in any of the of these documentaries that even though the fbi
01:35:10.480 closed the investigation uh db cooper to this day if they find it like if they find it find him um he
01:35:18.000 can be prosecuted and i think that has a name for the fbi but i don't know what it is oh really yeah
01:35:23.760 you can still be prosecuted to this day maybe even even though the fbi closed the investigation
01:35:28.720 it has a name but i just don't remember what it can you look it up real quick i mean i mean there's
01:35:32.800 always a statute of limitations but i guess maybe uh because there is i think an air piracy statue on the
01:35:38.240 books that doesn't have a statute of limitations and actually declassified uh i think the law might
01:35:43.920 have come in after the fact um from a case that i watched on declassified so um yeah i like that
01:35:49.920 angle you can see us right there going hard in the paint on on the kick out cam uh and you can see
01:35:54.400 angie over there doing what she does as well uh okay so let's go ahead um so let me go back to the
01:36:01.440 documentary and then we're going to go into the death theory here guys next unless someone stumbles upon
01:36:06.320 cooper's remains or manages to track down the rest of the money it seems there is little hope of
01:36:11.600 resolution did cooper survive i have no idea but as long as that possibility cannot be dismissed
01:36:19.280 the legend of db cooper will no doubt persist and shout out to lemonito bro great video great
01:36:26.080 breakdown that you did uh so we're gonna go ahead and look at a um national geographic documentary
01:36:32.400 that goes into the theory guys of him potentially dying before i do that though um here is from the
01:36:39.680 official fbi website by the way as well uh scientists hunt for db cooper clues db cooper 1971 has a wild
01:36:48.560 scheme to jump like the video guys 1200 y'all in here man we should be at 1 000 likes easy out of the back
01:36:55.440 of an airplane at 10 000 feet in the middle of the night in a rainstorm over unknown territory the guy
01:37:01.200 either had to be crazy or brilliant and have mad skills right at the spot we're standing here we've
01:37:06.960 calculated that this is the precise location that brian ingram when he was eight years of age scooped
01:37:13.200 across the sand with his arm and uncovered the three bundles of bills which have been the only cooper
01:37:19.040 cash ever recovered from that hijacking event in 1971. well i i think it's a great mystery you know
01:37:25.120 what happened to this guy all right this guy larry carr is the case agent guys um now he's probably
01:37:30.160 the one that closed the case oh he was the lead agent that he was the lead he's the modern lead agent
01:37:36.080 he was the lead investigation investigator yes yeah but he wasn't the original case agent he inherited
01:37:41.680 this case from the 70s this dude yeah this dude uh let me find the actual original case agent for
01:37:46.880 y'all because he has more details last thing we knew is he had two hundred thousand dollars and
01:37:51.360 bailed out of the back of a 7 27 november november 24 1971 uh and then from there we don't know if
01:37:58.720 we can find resolution to the case without allocating resources without sending fbi manpower to the
01:38:05.200 investigation but come up with an answer then why wouldn't we do that we have with us a team of
01:38:09.840 people that have all volunteered their time their money and their effort to come try and solve this just
01:38:14.320 purely for the excitement of doing it right now we're on tina bar we're looking at the location
01:38:18.880 where the money was found tomorrow we're going to be heading off to look at unpublished photos from
01:38:23.360 the oregonian newspaper which could tell us exactly what was going on here at that time and then at the
01:38:28.720 end of the week we're heading up to seattle to meet with special agent larry carr to look at the fbi
01:38:33.760 archive right now we're in the little washugal river which is east of the flight plat of db cooper and
01:38:41.040 where they think he potentially jumped out we're here because the little washuga river and the
01:38:45.680 washuga river are the biggest rivers in the area that are capable of moving a wad of money like this
01:38:51.040 downstream so it's thought that his money fell into one of these two rivers went downstream hit the
01:38:58.400 columbia river and then moved further south on the columbia river toward the ocean until it showed up
01:39:03.360 on tina bar we're out here making a campfire my father and i and that's what we there is a kid
01:39:09.600 that found the money i think he was eight or nine years old back then uh but obviously now he's an
01:39:14.080 adult and uh because i think this video was shot somewhere probably he was yeah so this is almost
01:39:20.480 20 years well over 20 years later discovered discovered his dad tried to take that credit though
01:39:26.400 now that wasn't you bro it was him three packets of total dollar bills later to be proven as ransom
01:39:32.960 money of dv cooper we're throwing a lot of technology at these cooper bills and trying to figure out the
01:39:39.280 history what caused them to degrade what degradation components have been mixed in with them and does
01:39:44.560 this tell us something about where these cooper bills have been got a pack of of uh bills on there
01:39:51.200 trying to find out how boring it is and as far as what's the distance it's going to travel
01:39:57.840 we've seen the finest location right here where it seems like it's wanting to come right back to us
01:40:02.080 which happens to be right at the spot that i found the money um 1980. why am i so interested in db cooper
01:40:08.560 who isn't interested in db cooper after hearing um all right women deserve less who cares what she got
01:40:14.000 to say all right so now we're going to get into uh this was the case agent right here guys the original
01:40:19.840 uh ralph hemmelsbach i can't find the dang retired fbi special agent ralph hemmelsbach was one of the
01:40:26.880 first agents to respond to the db cooper hijacking at portland international airports in 1971.
01:40:36.000 and you always want to talk to the original case agents guys because they're the ones that are going
01:40:39.280 to have the most piss of vinegar to solve the case versus someone that inherits the case later on
01:40:42.720 hemmelsbach continued to pursue leads for the rest of his career becoming the public face of the fbi's
01:40:52.240 investigation the db cooper case had a bigger impact on my life than any other single case i've ever had
01:41:06.320 when you had heard what his demands were that he asked for four parachutes and two hundred thousand dollars
01:41:13.440 was there anything in your mind thinking about who this guy might be no uh my initial uh reaction
01:41:21.200 was uh you look for criminals you know because the guy doesn't live his whole life as a law-abiding
01:41:28.480 citizen then all of a sudden uh threatened to kill over 40 people and uh uh himself is there any just
01:41:37.600 so you guys know um and again this is history channel so we got to be careful here um the plane
01:41:42.800 was not packed if i'm not mistaken it was only one one or two one or two three quarters uh it was 37
01:41:50.080 passengers 37 and six people of the crew okay so but how much did that plane hold like 200 seats or
01:41:56.240 something like that yeah i think so okay so it was damn near empty uh and remember he flew he was
01:42:01.040 flying the day before thanksgiving so you know that's not a typical day that you want to uh you
01:42:05.520 want to travel so he was smart to pick a certain day when he knew that the there wouldn't be the most
01:42:09.520 people on board and it would be a skeleton crew what was that people will go home for for the for the
01:42:15.280 thanksgiving no yeah yeah yeah but you don't want to fly in the day before thanksgiving that sucks
01:42:19.680 you know you typically want to be there a couple days prior anybody out there that you think this
01:42:27.280 is the guy but you weren't able to pin anything on him no no if i had gotten that close to where i was
01:42:34.640 convinced on duty or off i'd still be looking because no person should be able to profit from a criminal
01:42:45.040 activity and one thing that mr hoover always reminded us was that you don't arrive at a conclusion
01:42:56.400 without the facts you know and that's not as easy to do not just for investigators but if you're and
01:43:02.720 yeah j edgar hoover was the first director of the fbi so that tells you guys that this dude was probably
01:43:07.040 in the bureau like right at the beginning so he's an old old school fbi agent way back in the day man
01:43:14.240 not like today where it's all bureaucratic right the bureau nowadays man is super bureaucratic man
01:43:19.360 a lot of red tape it's very difficult for them to get their job done a good friend of mine actually
01:43:22.880 still an fbi agent to this day and uh it's really tough for them to do guys because it's such a
01:43:27.360 political thing nowadays uh versus you know that's one thing i liked about hsi is like we're just out
01:43:32.480 there running and gunning and doing what the we got to do because it's a relatively new agency so we
01:43:36.720 don't have all this red tape in the way of getting done but the bureau bro you know it's the you know
01:43:42.080 they they have a lot we have a lot of funny nicknames for them uh you know famous but incompetent
01:43:46.960 um oh my god yeah call them the phoebs uh as we call them yeah you call a lot of people call them
01:43:55.120 the bureau uh you know the federal bureau federal bureaucratic idiots you know like there's a whole bunch
01:44:00.880 of um names or famous but idiots there's so many different acronyms other agencies say uh to make fun of the bureau man
01:44:08.800 the supervisor if you're the head of the office right you know everybody up the chain has to guard
01:44:13.680 for that it's very easy to fall prey to aha there's no real aha moment early in a case like that right
01:44:22.320 were you thinking we're going to find his body somewhere sooner or later is that what you were
01:44:26.560 thinking yeah yeah that's what you're hoping i i'd rather believe that he is dead if he wasn't dead
01:44:34.080 and if he was alive right now and you met him what would you say to him freeze you're under arrest
01:44:42.720 bro fbi open up it never ends
01:44:48.640 you'd be older than him that's funny as hell bro my man is barely walking freeze you're under arrest
01:44:57.840 maybe cooper right now must be dead yeah yeah i doubt he's yeah he's if he's alive now he'd be
01:45:03.120 around 98 years old or something like that so um okay so let's go ahead guys and go into the death
01:45:10.240 theory and actually um those scientists that y'all saw when we were um covering uh when we're showing
01:45:16.320 you the fbi version that's where that those clips came from actually so we're gonna go to the national
01:45:20.800 geographic one so we got to be careful here because uh national geographic are losers so i'm gonna pause
01:45:25.360 this thing quite a bit um so we go ahead and um you know make sure we don't get hit with the stream
01:45:30.320 whatever but before i do that real quick i need y'all to like the video because right now i'm looking
01:45:37.120 we got let's see how many of y'all we got uh 948 likes but there's 1200 almost 1300 you guys watching
01:45:43.680 right now so i need y'all to get me to 1000 likes okay guys i really don't want to stop the show i hate
01:45:51.120 doing that but you guys have been you know one of them boys you know what i mean when it comes to giving
01:45:57.680 the likes out listen it's not a dollar i'm asking you guys for money i'm only asking you guys to like
01:46:02.320 the video because i already know this thing is going to get throttled by the algorithm because we
01:46:05.280 had a stream suspended and uh you know we're fresh to fit in general is shadow banned but like the
01:46:12.400 goddamn video guys subscribe to the channel and follow fed reacts on instagram yes follow fed reacts
01:46:17.680 on instagram angie manages that so um so yeah so let's go ahead and get this thing uh let's get the show
01:46:24.320 on the road as dv cooper would say so we're going to go into the theory guys of why he may have not
01:46:31.280 survived believes the three bundles of ransom money provide the best clue to solving cooper's fate
01:46:43.760 apart from the 5800 found on the riverbank none of the other bills were ever found in circulation
01:46:54.320 thomas convinced that the bag of money all 200 000 of it must have traveled by river to where the
01:47:02.160 three stacks of money were found the three bundles couldn't have traveled independently
01:47:08.320 yet ended up in the same place on the sandbar what's so funny and you're over here dying what's
01:47:12.960 going on it's the shot the chat what they say shadow bank fresh it's a shadow shadow what here
01:47:23.040 shadow ben nigger fresh is the shot
01:47:28.640 oh man
01:47:32.960 you guys are hilarious man y'all got no chill in the chat man this tells us that the bank bag was involved
01:47:40.160 in the transport it could have split open close to the sandbar thereby increasing the odds that three
01:47:48.000 out of the hundred bundles of cash would have ended up together in the same place
01:47:54.240 if the bank bag ended up in the river
01:47:57.840 then whatever happened to cooper the money he risked his life to steal was never spent
01:48:10.160 but how exactly did the bag of money end up in the water okay guys so we're going to get into
01:48:16.240 the theory now of how the money ended up there and um the facts and circumstances based on the
01:48:23.200 scientists of what potentially could have led to db cooper's death all right guys so um and again like
01:48:29.280 i said before this is just one theory guys there's a bunch of theories out there if you guys watch the
01:48:33.840 netflix documentary i think uh what was his name tom colbert if i'm not mistaken he's the head of a
01:48:38.240 cold case uh they spent a decade plus on this and they're pretty much i think if i'm not mistaken
01:48:43.360 they're almost certain that it's rack straw that was db cooper so there's a million different theories
01:48:48.560 on this and this is just one of them as to how he potentially didn't survive
01:48:57.600 tom examines the fight path and timing of the jump recorded at approximately 8 10.
01:49:08.880 at this point he's directly over the lewis river if the bank bag which was being flailed by 200
01:49:15.840 mile an hour winds detached from cooper it would have fallen directly below into the lewis river
01:49:25.120 the lewis river is around 300 feet wide with a fast current and rapids so that is a theory that
01:49:32.000 potentially guys the bag right because remember he was trying to affix the bag to himself
01:49:37.920 right uh before he jumped out it is possible with all those winds and him flying all over the place
01:49:43.680 right uh that the bag could have fell off of him and fell into the river and you know he would have
01:49:48.000 been mad as hell or maybe some of the money would have fallen out and he was able to secure it before
01:49:51.840 the rest of it fell out and that's why that money ended up there so that's another potential situation
01:49:56.560 it's possible that the money bag could make its way downstream
01:50:07.040 but dan cooper was protecting the money with his life
01:50:12.720 and with 30 feet of parachute cord could have secured the back
01:50:16.480 if cooper did secure the back and managed to deploy his shoe
01:50:26.800 where would he have landed okay so this is where stuff is going to get interesting here guys because
01:50:31.680 remember uh we talked about this as well guys uh that unfortunately the military parachute that he chose
01:50:40.880 uh doesn't allow you to maneuver and steer like the other luxury citizen one or sports parachute that he
01:50:50.320 chose to leave behind so um you would have been at the mercy of the wind at that point which we know
01:50:57.120 it was pretty damn cold and windy that night so let's get back to it
01:51:01.680 his chosen parachute the nbaid unlike the sports chute is not maneuverable it would take him wherever the winds blew
01:51:19.920 tom k believes that whatever altitude cooper deployed
01:51:24.960 the westerly winds would carry him directly to his worst nightmare
01:51:29.280 water water oh shit
01:51:36.000 and i want you guys to picture this you fall into the water the day before thanksgiving
01:51:41.440 being into the pacific northwest which is cold as fuck by the way it was below zero that night guys
01:51:47.680 so it would have been freezing and all you got on is a trench coat a suit maybe some long johns underneath
01:51:54.480 your suit right uh because he's planning to jump out but it is cold as hell guys we're talking hypothermia type temperature
01:52:04.800 from our calculations we can determine that if cooper pulled his parachute right away he would
01:52:09.840 have had a long drift and likely ended up in lake merwin if he waited and pulled a couple thousand
01:52:16.080 feet above the ground he would have ended up in the lewis river lake merwin is a huge dam which spills directly
01:52:26.080 into the lewis river the low cloud cover and the non-maneuverable parachute would have given cooper
01:52:33.840 for little if any chance of changing course
01:52:39.920 with near freezing temperatures
01:52:43.040 the water would have been cold cold enough to kill
01:52:50.080 so real quick before we go into uh how he would have had to been able to survive this
01:52:54.080 if he um actually landed in the water i need you guys to do me a favor well number one we're
01:52:58.080 watching national geographic so you already know that they're going to be on some lame-o
01:53:01.360 shit like all about copyright blah blah so like the video i see that we got 1k likes which i really
01:53:06.320 appreciate that but there's 1300 you guys watching right now so if we could get 100 engagement and get
01:53:12.800 1300 likes i would really appreciate that i need you guys to not be one of these ninja watchers that
01:53:17.920 sits there on youtube like this
01:53:19.920 because this is half y'all that watch the goddamn show just literally sitting there like
01:53:31.360 what the hell i need y'all to hit the like button show your goddamn support because content like this
01:53:38.800 you ain't gonna find it anywhere else you're not gonna have a former fed with actual experience
01:53:43.520 giving y'all sauce on how these investigations are done giving you guys some commentary i mean
01:53:49.040 god damn it look at angie's notes god damn it she worked really hard on this for y'all show them
01:53:52.480 that notebook show it to them woman so they know yeah you are you're not out here just being a pretty
01:53:57.040 face look at that man she out here drawing suits and trench coats for y'all the plane
01:54:03.520 show them the other page notes that you had with the parachute i drew the dynamite too she drew the
01:54:08.240 dynamite like come on guys no security she's taking notes yeah english is her second language
01:54:14.000 show them the the parachute yeah the pictures that you took look at that man we work hard over here
01:54:22.880 okay like the goddamn video we should be 1300 likes easy we're at 1100 we should be 1300 easy man
01:54:29.520 she ain't just a pretty face out here you know oh i'm going to talk and give some commentary no man
01:54:34.160 she really be out here researching for y'all bro is that your impression of my accent pretty much
01:54:39.920 it's terrible oh my god yeah man so like the goddamn video man she'd be she'd be out here like
01:54:43.840 helping out for real um her and kim like really go hard behind the scenes guys to research stuff a
01:54:49.600 lot of the times i'll be like hey uh what do the people want she'll give me a list of the cases i'll
01:54:53.600 be like all right let's hit this one um db cooper was it your idea to do this one this week or was
01:54:58.160 it kim's i wanted to do it yeah so there you go man y'all are getting this show right now because uh
01:55:02.800 because i heard man so go ahead and like the video subscribe to the channel if you haven't
01:55:06.320 already and uh let's go ahead and hit 1300 on this thing man let's get 100 engagement we are
01:55:11.360 risking right now getting the stream shut down because we're playing national geographic
01:55:15.040 if we're gonna take these risks that's fine right some of these videos don't even get monetized
01:55:19.360 to be honest with y'all i don't care about that my goal isn't to sit here and make
01:55:23.040 money off of this channel that's not really our goal here our goal is to give y'all entertainment
01:55:27.200 sauce and diversify and show you guys that we're you know we're not a one-trick pony over
01:55:30.480 here fresh and fit we can give you guys everything so um the only thing we ask guys for all the hard
01:55:35.040 work and research is to like the video that's all we ask man y'all see angie over here pulling work
01:55:40.240 behind the scenes she's not just here to just give some commentary she really does study these cases
01:55:44.400 and enjoy doing it and helping you guys i really love doing this to be honest with you guys so yeah
01:55:48.960 like the video like the video please when db cooper hit the water like we believe he did he would
01:55:58.240 only had a matter of minutes in that type of cold water to get off on shore at that point remember he
01:56:04.160 was laden with 20 pounds of money he had a harness and he had a long parachute attached to him at this
01:56:08.640 point so we think that his odds of survival would have been very low
01:56:16.880 he used the poorer choice of equipment the conditions were horrible and the fact
01:56:22.720 that we haven't found anything really leads me to believe that he died that night
01:56:30.720 so that's debatable we know that there was a citizen type parachute sports parachute and a
01:56:34.560 military one he chose the military one because uh more than likely he probably was military trained
01:56:39.600 and he would have been i would have preferred to use equipment that he understands and knows
01:56:43.200 so it's not necessarily a poor choice of equipment it's uh just equipment that might have not been as
01:56:48.160 good but hey what's better equipment that you're familiar with and know how to operate or equipment
01:56:51.600 that's slightly better but you're not familiar with i always go with what you're familiar with
01:56:54.560 yeah also uh i don't know if they mentioned this in here but uh the the lady that hand the
01:57:02.960 patches to to db cooper they actually came with instructions oh yes good point they came with
01:57:09.920 instructions and he said that they they wouldn't need them he wouldn't need them why do you put that
01:57:14.720 camera oh yeah switch it up man switch it up okay so right so you don't gotta look at the camera
01:57:21.440 yeah you're gonna saw it it's fine it came with instructions and he said that they he wouldn't
01:57:26.880 need them so that also yeah that also was very yeah yeah like yeah he basically was like i don't
01:57:31.840 i don't need any of that that camera is so weird but i take it out just because they can just see
01:57:36.320 like the back part of the studio and everything hey y'all like that yo like the goddamn video man we
01:57:41.600 go hard to paint for y'all man y'all see that setup man we go hard to fucking paint over here man
01:57:47.920 uh okay so yeah that also was a big thing too because he didn't say he needed the instructions
01:57:53.120 guys he was very dismissive when they gave it to him body would have moved down the fast running river
01:57:59.440 some 20 miles to the columbia
01:58:05.280 the three bundles of ransom cash were found just a few miles from where the lewis and columbia rivers meet
01:58:11.360 but there's a catch these few miles are up river against its natural flow
01:58:24.160 tom k offers a rational explanation
01:58:29.520 at the time the columbia river was one of the busiest shipping lanes in north america
01:58:34.560 we believe it's possible that cooper's body and the money became snagged up on one of these ships
01:58:42.960 propellers and it moved upstream with the ship at some point the violence of this ripped open the bank
01:58:50.080 bag and spilled out the money so i'm gonna go ahead and do a poll here with you guys okay
01:58:56.640 do you guys think db cooper survived hold on i'll have you give your theory last angie let me um
01:59:06.560 get ask the community here though i'm putting a poll up right now for y'all i want to know what you guys
01:59:12.640 think polls up right now do you guys think db cooper survived this jump yes or no and i'll end the poll
01:59:22.240 at the end of the you know i'm gonna make a poll on instagram too on instagram too yeah go ahead
01:59:27.040 good good move good move uh so i want to see what y'all think because now you guys are seeing
01:59:32.800 kind of both perspectives here right you saw you've seen the suspects you've seen the evidence
01:59:37.120 in the case even though there's not much of it you've seen what his request has demands you've seen
01:59:41.120 the notes you've seen the ticket uh you know what he was wearing that night you know the date
01:59:46.880 what the conditions were with all these facts do you guys think he survived okay play the last part
01:59:54.800 of this bit here three of the hundred bundles subsequently found their way onto the shore
02:00:05.360 before being covered by the shifting sands
02:00:08.000 but if this is true what happened to cooper's body all right real quick before we get into this guys
02:00:17.440 we only got one one thousand one hundred likes okay we're playing national geographic here these
02:00:22.640 guys are probably going to come in and cock block because they're haters okay because they're stupid
02:00:26.080 so i need y'all to like the video this is gonna be hit it 1300 let's get 1300 likes we hit 100 uh
02:00:33.040 percent engagement go ahead angie um so i don't worry it's not gonna like this but because uh i am a
02:00:39.360 very fan of marvel and i actually believe lucky might have been db cooper i'm gonna put that option
02:00:44.480 on the poll you guys so what do you guys think if you actually watch the lucky series or you know
02:00:49.680 anything about marvel you'll know what i'm talking about on instagram yeah okay go ahead uh so yeah
02:00:58.080 guys let's get to 100 engagement god damn it we need 100 engagement we need what 1300 likes on this
02:01:05.280 thing let's make angio comfortable with this camera angle god damn it so go ahead like the video right
02:01:11.040 now and subscribe to the goddamn channel if you haven't already all right this is camera eight this
02:01:16.160 is the kick out cam actually so go ahead y'all see that right there i got the little kick well we're
02:01:22.480 not kicking anybody out in this situation but you guys get the point god is that the camera that you
02:01:26.720 guys put so when you kick out somebody on the yeah we put the little boot on the side yeah so yeah
02:01:32.160 i like the video guys all right we look and the polls up on instagram for the people yeah okay let's
02:01:40.160 see what potentially happen to db cooper's body like the video guys 1300 likes let's get it the currents
02:01:44.560 and these tell us that within a few days the columbia river is going to suck up your body and spit it out
02:01:49.680 into the ocean so db cooper may be at the bottom of the ocean at this point and we would never ever be
02:01:54.800 able to come up with this body after nearly four decades tom k offers the first comprehensive theory
02:02:04.320 of what might have happened to dan cooper
02:02:09.680 but dead or alive the identity of the hijacker remains a mystery
02:02:15.280 all right bam so uh that is the theory guys with um with db cooper uh that's the theory that he might
02:02:28.240 have not survived a lot of people think that he did survive i'm looking at the poll right now looks
02:02:32.160 like 68 of you guys think db cooper survived um which is oh that's interesting um angie what do you
02:02:39.120 you want to give your thoughts uh on what do you what do you think here i have my own theories i think
02:02:44.400 uh somebody i have like one theory that is maybe somebody might have a boat waiting for him on any of
02:02:50.800 lakes well on on the main thing like the the lake thing or the lady the stewards the is this the steward
02:03:00.640 the word that you said yeah the stewardess yeah yeah flight attendant yeah the flight attendant was
02:03:05.520 helping him i heavily believe that i believe that but like the second one tina moklo might have helped
02:03:15.760 him and he kept like a part of the money okay i think that interesting interesting uh yeah i mean
02:03:23.680 from all the planning that he had done it sounded a little weird that he would like maybe his intention
02:03:28.960 was to jump out in that area the whole time and he just told them to go to new mexico or sorry to go to
02:03:32.800 um mexico mexico as as a diversion so who knows um but regardless uh seems like uh okay it looks like
02:03:41.280 69 of you guys looking at the poll here think he survived 31 of you guys think he passed away
02:03:48.320 um but yeah it was a rough night that night as well i'm gonna support my theory on the on the
02:03:53.680 stewardness the flight attendant helping him on and so you think he survived too yeah he might have
02:03:58.640 survived but the thing what i'm saying why i'm saying this why i'm saying this is because nobody
02:04:04.160 else but the stewardness saw the suitcase nobody else saw it it was just them that said so no one
02:04:13.520 else saw the bomb except for exactly so you think the first one schaffner yeah was in on it then
02:04:20.080 because only schaffner saw the bomb not not buckalo not tina yeah you won't see in any any of these
02:04:26.560 documentaries that both both of the of the flight attendants saw the bomb you will see like only one
02:04:33.200 or maybe maybe what like maybe the two of them saw it but i think he bribed them and or they were
02:04:39.680 working together and that's why he escaped the whole time okay all right well that's an interesting uh
02:04:46.320 theory uh yeah i mean because i didn't see some of you guys in the chat are asking me guys
02:04:52.080 i'll keep it that little job i have no clue like uh um i i don't like to speculate on things wildly
02:05:01.280 uh but given the the amount of time that he probably would have faced and the severity of the charges you
02:05:10.400 know i air piracy is you're gonna do a lot of time as you guys could see mccoy did like 40 plus years or
02:05:14.960 something like that uh to him he looked at it like i'm not getting caught so the fact that he jumped
02:05:21.920 out in a random area at night so cold um let's say he didn't land in the water and he landed in the in
02:05:30.480 the woods well it would have been very difficult for him to you know navigate the woods that dark in
02:05:37.120 the middle of nowhere with the wilderness without some type of aid and how would the aid know where he's
02:05:41.440 at unless he had maybe a satellite phone on his person who knows maybe if he had um camping gear
02:05:46.800 with him i mean if you got a cigarette lighter uh and a knife i mean you could build fire right
02:05:53.040 maybe he was an outdoorsman and he kind of was like you know what no matter where i land i'll be
02:05:56.240 able to survive and find my way back so that could have been it as well um he might not pay somebody
02:06:03.280 to help him and we'll never know yeah i mean yeah we'll never know i mean uh there's a high
02:06:09.120 likelihood too that he was he was canadian that he could have after he had the money he would have
02:06:13.200 went back right into canada because as you guys know just you guys know i didn't know this from
02:06:17.520 being in homeland for so long uh the northern border border is not nearly as secure as the southern
02:06:22.560 border right you can kind of go up and down into you know into and out of canada no problem if you're
02:06:27.600 an american or canadian citizen they don't really give a um it's the southwest border that all the
02:06:32.800 scrutiny is at you know so it's possible that he could have fled back to canada if he was a canadian
02:06:39.680 citizen there is some evidence to show that he was a canadian he could potentially been canada
02:06:42.960 the canadian so um and he could have also been canadian military guys he might have not been even
02:06:48.320 american military could have been a canadian military so back then you wouldn't have to show
02:06:52.400 your passport at the airport no i don't even think he showed id that's the thing yep you didn't even
02:06:58.160 show id that's why he was able to say dan cooper and they didn't have to verify that was
02:07:01.440 definitely not his real name yeah of course i think he actually saw the comic i think he was
02:07:07.200 like probably yeah yeah a fan of the comic and he was like you yeah that's just too many that's way
02:07:11.600 too coincidental yeah so um 53 of people voting that yes he survived okay 35 no and 12 that he was lucky
02:07:22.720 the whole time okay and people are saying tsa yeah guys tsa didn't exist back then tsa came into play
02:07:30.320 after the 911 attacks guys i don't think y'all understand how different the 1970s were man a lot
02:07:35.120 of you guys are young here in the chat so you don't know i mean i was born 1990 so i don't even know but
02:07:38.960 i'll tell y'all even as a kid i remember airports were not nearly as strict after 9-11 so the 70s
02:07:44.640 were a whole different breed no ids you plop 20 down you buy the ticket right there at the counter
02:07:50.080 there's no internet to reserve the ticket beforehand there's no expedient none of this they had travel
02:07:54.480 agents who you could call or you could just show up to the airport and just put the money down and pay
02:07:58.800 and be on the plane and go to where you got to go so there was no security and they didn't give a
02:08:02.800 they served alcohol they served uh you could you could smoke cigarettes back then on planes
02:08:07.600 it wasn't you know the the security that you guys have come to learn uh as of today so uh let's read
02:08:14.000 the rest of these chats and close this thing out we got almost 1400 y'all back in here welcome back for
02:08:17.840 all you guys that bailed when we hit the uh little stream unavailable thing uh but we made it uh dollar
02:08:24.000 thank you so much from the arab brother uh who else we got uh john ray db equal them boys yeah
02:08:29.280 probably uh you should never discount a suspect suspect just because of witness of something
02:08:34.640 they don't remember and that's from rob yeah that's true witnesses can be uh faulty at times
02:08:38.960 darnell elliot goes mr gaines if cooper was prior military he would have known the difference between
02:08:42.880 training and real parachutes the military always marks training aids as to not confuse with real items
02:08:49.760 okay but again uh he didn't take he took it uh the dummy shoe probably to secure the money darnell
02:08:55.040 you got to remember that as well uh jr troy five bucks appreciate that my friend uh likes are
02:09:00.800 literally free unlike this super chat do this man some justice and show love for his and and helica's
02:09:05.600 work i appreciate that my friend and pronouncing it with the spanish way uh yeah guys we're at 1.2k likes
02:09:11.600 if we can hit 1300 likes before the end of the show we're almost at 1400 y'all watching but i'm not
02:09:15.520 gonna ask for 1400 likes i'm just gonna ask for 1.3 so we can have that high engagement
02:09:19.920 um sam swaka goes myron i'll just tell you who db cooper was i'm 30 them boys we eat matzo ball
02:09:27.920 soup and running the world also accept my linkedin connect fresh too okay i appreciate that my friend
02:09:33.040 uh irs shout out to you irs uh i paid y'all man so don't ask me no more questions shout out to you
02:09:37.760 myron for providing great content that no one else can match angie out here providing why some women
02:09:42.400 actually deserve some things w fed reacts yes angie is very very helpful guys uh african goes 10 bucks
02:09:48.480 two years i've been listening while at work never missed an episode you guys the fnf changed my life
02:09:52.480 thank you maybe someday i'll stop ninja watching l anus and reach around and soy boy reactors yeah
02:09:56.800 those idiots man i appreciate that uh anything else that's it we're caught up cool uh angie uh what are
02:10:05.680 your last thoughts on this case and what do you think um yeah well you already said it i think he might
02:10:10.880 have survived he might have paid somebody to help him or i don't know he probably died but i don't
02:10:17.600 think i mean if he died could he have drowned the whole time i don't know that's those are my i have
02:10:24.400 so many questions yeah if he landed the landed in the water he definitely could have survived but it
02:10:28.960 would have been frigid so he would have had but we don't know if he had gear with him who knows
02:10:33.200 he didn't have gear i'm telling you like he was wearing a suit and a coat no no no i mean as in
02:10:37.840 like maybe he wore long johns under his shit no i don't think so uh but it depends on where he
02:10:42.960 landed um michael me stroke one dollar appreciate that and uh and i gave you all my thoughts man so
02:10:48.640 who knows but regardless the legend is gonna stay uh again the only air hijacking to be unsolved in
02:10:57.840 american history speaking of air hijackings i'll probably cover uh an air hijacking case for you
02:11:02.480 guys from declassified there was a good one um that came out on declassified uh from i think the egypt
02:11:08.640 air hijacking and of like the 90s or 80s but but yeah hijacking is a nail because most of the hijackings
02:11:15.440 just get caught yeah it's a big l yeah that is a big big air hijacking uh chief keep those db
02:11:23.280 cooper is angie's grandpa escaped to her country okay definitely a possibility yeah link dark mellow
02:11:28.240 goes myron is a boss looking good bro stay up i appreciate that my friend i got my hair back
02:11:32.480 um uh cool guys i think we're at 1.2 kate let's see did we hit 1.3 1.2 yeah 1.2 god damn it y'all
02:11:40.400 didn't y'all are acting like them boys right now but uh anyway guys i hope you enjoyed that episode
02:11:48.240 of uh fed reacts um you guys have been asking for db cooper for a very long time yes uh and i
02:11:54.240 got you guys yes shout out to angie for suggesting this episode for you guys she actually brought it
02:11:58.240 back to my memory because i forgot about even doing this one uh and what the next episode will probably
02:12:03.200 do again i will do something with the mafia for y'all and then we'll do something with ryan
02:12:06.480 dawson and then after that i think we might take a one or two week break where we cover serial killers
02:12:11.840 and other cases that you guys were requesting for a while for the thursday episodes and then we will go
02:12:15.840 ahead and get into the colombian cartel so that's probably going to be the next series that we do
02:12:20.240 and uh please follow at fair reacts on instagram guys uh we're almost at 1k followers and yeah i'm
02:12:27.120 very like excited and happy with the with the instagram and how it's going because we have plenty of
02:12:32.400 content coming up bam and uh angie is running that as well so uh you do you take you take requests on
02:12:38.400 there as well right yes i do i do take requests and she responds you guys been texting me to to ask
02:12:44.080 mario for works and this and that and i'll be you know yeah asking my own about those things as well
02:12:50.320 yeah so shout out to angie for managing the fed reacts on instagram uh it's linked below and then
02:12:54.800 also guys uh the audio version of the podcast we have it live on anchor aka also known as uh
02:13:00.720 on spotify for creators nowadays i think is what it's called so if you guys want to listen to the
02:13:04.160 audio version of this podcast it's definitely there so uh you know we're on apple podcast shout
02:13:09.600 up to mo for handling that by the way we're on apple spotify google every single podcast platform
02:13:15.120 that you guys like and enjoy we're out there actually i could show you out real quick um what
02:13:19.520 i mean by this um it's right here if you guys go to the description right uh let me show it to y'all
02:13:26.960 real fast you go to description right uh so we'll go on youtube real quick we need to change that photo
02:13:32.880 yeah i need to change it this is true but you go you come here right so this is the video right i'm
02:13:38.240 showing myself here and then top of the description anchor right fed reacts bam it'll bring you there
02:13:43.040 and then you can go ahead and pick whatever platform you like whether it's apple spotify
02:13:47.440 or an rss or whatever it is but uh let's say we go to spotify bam here we are you know what i mean
02:13:53.120 or if you guys like apple click this boom we're on apple okay nice so yeah man all the episodes are
02:13:59.200 there guys go check it out uh because some of you guys like to get the audio version but i know spotify
02:14:03.600 also has it on video as well if you guys like video and mo uploads i think uh once or twice a
02:14:08.560 week so um so yeah man uh can you show the playlist as well uh oh oh yeah on the channel yeah good idea
02:14:15.920 actually so guys if you come on over to the youtube channel right for fed reacts you guys are gonna see
02:14:21.760 here uh the nice little banner um and then oh what the hell my bad i did not mean that uh you come down
02:14:28.720 and let me hit control plus a few so they can actually see right uh you guys so we have different
02:14:35.120 playlists for y'all right we got um all videos right so every single video that we release is
02:14:40.480 right here right chronological order from uh newest to oldest then you go into the hip-hop and rico cases
02:14:46.480 right um from the most viewed right we got the ysl o block meli casanova because a lot of you guys
02:14:52.800 have asked for some of these cases we've already done them right um obviously the black mafia tori
02:14:58.080 lanes uh six nine um then we go into infamous serial killers jeffrey dahmer john wayne gacy ted
02:15:04.480 bundy the zodiac killer the nice stalker um golden state killer i had a lot of fun doing this one with
02:15:09.680 kim and um um angie the toy box killer btk uh samuel little actually has the most kills in history
02:15:17.040 the green river killer uh then we got high profile cases you know amber heard um
02:15:22.560 this one was crazy um um courtney clenny hush puppy nigerian scammer jeffrey epstein
02:15:28.240 um shankuela robinson uh vibes cartel the nashville shooter jody area so yeah this chick is crazy
02:15:35.040 casey anthony that's one of my favorite ones and then we go into national security cases guys we got
02:15:39.280 terrorism right we got the merchant of death victor bout osama bin laden 9-11 right we cover the
02:15:44.240 official narrative and a conspiracy the uh the dc snipers right i did this one with angie as well this was
02:15:50.480 very enjoyable the boston marathon bombing right we actually just had the 10-year anniversary for
02:15:55.280 the boston marathon bombing uh so and i go into detail on this one as well man it's three because
02:16:00.240 i was living in boston at the time so i go like look look how in-depth we go on some of these
02:16:04.320 fucking things i'm showing surveillance footage of when the asian guy ran away from the hijackers and
02:16:09.600 made the phone call i played the 911 call all the detailed stamps are in there for y'all you know so go
02:16:14.800 ahead and watch some of this stuff man we put a lot of work in there um we cover the unabomber uh
02:16:20.880 espionage cases right we got hezbollah queen anna montez right she was spying for fidel castro
02:16:27.360 back in the day organized crime cases right we got the real paid in full story this one was the
02:16:32.320 craziest dirty cop history show ever with the um operation shattered shield pavel escobar uh which
02:16:38.640 was a ring in new york that he got caught but we're going to cover in more detail we got the italian
02:16:42.400 mafia in here the biggest heist in history 18.9 million right the pizza bomber case which i did
02:16:49.040 that with angie whitey bulger y'all been asking me for whitey bulger forever i have it it's right here
02:16:54.320 god damn it okay whitey bulger it's here right one of the biggest uh one of the most infamous uh
02:17:02.000 monsters in boston history right uh which i go i suggest you guys will watch black mass right great movie
02:17:08.720 yeah myron has like 300 plus videos in this channel guys i suggest you to check you all to
02:17:14.640 check them all before you request another one because you'll be requesting like the same ones
02:17:18.800 over and over and some of them we've done already covered and then i got a whole playlist just on
02:17:23.600 the italian mafia i went ahead and covered the colombo crime family with michael francis yeah shout out to
02:17:28.320 him right uh and then we did uh the banana crime family genovese gambino yeah you know history of
02:17:35.760 the italian mafia so guys we got probably the most diverse true crime channel on youtube man
02:17:44.560 so subscribe to the channel man let's get to 200k on the way like this goddamn video let's hit 1300 likes
02:17:50.240 and uh yeah man we're the best man we're the best out here yeah so um cool other than that guys we'll
02:17:56.480 catch you guys on the next episode of fed i'm going to go ahead and play this uh this is the
02:18:00.000 second to last um demo of the intro slash outro um like the video guys subscribe to the channel love
02:18:06.880 y'all angie i'll give you the last word before i close this thing out that was it i already did like
02:18:11.360 two times okay fantastic bye guys later
02:18:18.400 i'm a special agent with homelands investigations okay guys hsi
02:18:21.920 planner jeffrey williams and associate ysl did commit the felony here's what 6ix9ine actually got
02:18:26.080 this attack shifted the whole u.s government this guy got arrested espionage okay trading secrets
02:18:32.480 with the russians yeah killer is a pseudonym of an unidentified serial killer who operated in northern
02:18:36.960 california serial killers got samuel little etc they really get off on getting attention from the
02:18:42.560 media jeffrey epstein sex exploited and abused dozens of minor girls it was oj working together to get
02:18:48.400 nicole
02:18:48.960 nicole