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377 22
You are right, there are many credible alternative money transport explanations in addition to the three Jo put forth, but give her some credit for her new approach which explicitly acknowledges possibilities other than Duane's paper bag toss.
Her dogmatism is decreasing, even if only slightly.
Tom, you have hinted several times that many assumptions about the case are wrong. I wish you'd tell us what you think they are. I have this nagging suspicion that the money had some human help in getting to where it was found and that the river currents don't tell the whole story. Am I totally off base?
377
377 22
Duane thought so, but McCoy didnt fit theQuote
I may have my facts wrong, but McCoy seemed like such a great fit but for the alibi.
377
physical description and with all his blood on the floor
the dna comparison was easy!
How many quarts does it take!

That assumes that the FBI has Cooper's DNA. How can you be sure that they really do? If Cooper were really clever he could leave stuff that had other people's DNA on it. I wonder if your DNA could be extracted from your ties? Seems like a a tie, with no skin or hair contact, might not have the wearers DNA on it.
377
I’m afraid I’m going to have to agree with georger. “Who are you and what have you done with the real snowmman?"
The communication between you and me is very poor. For instance;
Quote“That one line in the ARTCC transcript could mean nothing, or give us a little to think about. I was surprised Sluggo didn't jump on it, minimally asking "does it mean anything".
So: I'm not looking down that way any more.”
I don’t know if it’s a language barrier i.e. my redneck; “Let’s poke it with a stick!” vs. your Northern California declarative interrogatives; “We’re going to Tena Bar?”
But, I just don’t understand what you are talking about half of the time. And, when you go off on one of your fantasy tangents, you lose me altogether.
Come on… show us the old snowmman. I’ll let you in my secret DBC Club. {You’ll still have to learn the secret knock and secret handshake though.}
Sluggo_Monster
Web Page
Blog
NORJAK Forum
Quotewhy the new avatar? what am I missing"
It’s just a photo of a
Then one day, something went wrong in his life and he turned abrasive, cynical, and sometimes cruel. I really don’t know what it was. Whatever it was, I wish it hadn’t happened. Now, I just feel sorry for him.
Sluggo_Monster
Web Page
Blog
NORJAK Forum
He refuses to acknowledge the places I went and that the developement in the area has taken over - what was farm and forest is now developement after developement. He claimed the places did not exist ever - and I had 4 witness (one is deceased).
One was doing a favor for his Aunt by acting as our guide - this man was trained to know when someone was lieing...check you PM's.
377 22
Quotethis man was trained to know when someone was lieing.
And what kind of training is that may I ask? I want to take the course.
377
snowmman 3
1) Did Himmelsbach really never talk to Rataczak until way,way after he retired? (one or both of them)
2) Ckret has told us there are Rataczak interviews where Bill talks about how they were before the Columbia (unclear how Bill knew) when they felt the bump, and how they could see the suburbs of Portland (or whatever it was he said) when they felt the bump.
So there must be some kind of critical "bump" related interview of Rataczak. That Ckret is quoting. But we don't know by who. We don't know when it was done.
Was it done before the drop test? Would they have zeroed in on "bump" details before the drop test? Maybe. Did they go back and interview Rataczak again after the drop test? Or just rely on Anderson's interpretation of "sameness" and maybe consult the transcripts for "oscillations" or maybe not read the Rat interview about "bump".
I had speculated before that the people who created the original DZ map just didn't have all the data (interviews etc). Ckret has speculated that it was more about misinterpretations of data.
Without seeing more background on this Rat/Bump interview info, even that might be of unknown provenance?
Mainly because even Himmelsbach seems to be stepping away from talking to Rataczak.
If Himmelsbach was not "all over" Rataczak and the bump issue, you'd think all of his personal theorization about DZ is fairly weak.
What am I missing?
Himmelsbach and Jerry seem closely aligned from what we know so far. I'm very curious about why Tom seems to think Jerry has new info. It would be very good if he did.
snowmman 3
"And to think the Great Snowbird MISSED the Tacoma
angle altogether! Shame. "
I did. I'll admit it.
What's the Tacoma Angle?
QuoteRolling Fork is a water trough compared to the Washougal. There are only 3 ways the money got into the Columbia.
1. Cooper landed in the Columbia
2. Someone threw the money into the Columbia...at a later date.
3. All or part of the money was separated from Cooper when he jumped.
Hate to be the party pooper again, but this is patently false. #1 & #3 are impossible; they do not explain the money unless you add in some "conspiracy" type thinking (ie, more than one person handling the Cooper ransom or a literal army of people monitoring the flight all got it wrong)
You also ommitted a viable explanation, which is that Cooper himself placed the money somewhere in the Washougal watershed.
I want to remind people that if you're thinking about the Washougal, it's quite a leap of faith. He did not land there, so he would have had to hike. It's possible, but I don't think it would be likely that he'd survive then hike up some mountains to hide the money... but whatever.
Right now, the only Cooper I care about is Marquis. I knew him, and my heart goes out to him, his wife, his daughter, his family, and all of his friends. He was always nice to me and was quite a remarkable person. I hope we can all get some closure, but I'm also realistic...
georger 268
QuoteGeorger,
You are right, there are many credible alternative money transport explanations in addition to the three Jo put forth, but give her some credit for her new approach which explicitly acknowledges possibilities other than Duane's paper bag toss.
Her dogmatism is decreasing, even if only slightly.
377
I distinguish between apparent and actual. Given
the long history of symptoms we cannot assume
anything ... moreover the usual prognosis is what
it is.
377 22
The survivor's story about the other two taking off their life jackets and drifting/swimming away is bizzare. He must be very stressed and who knows how it affected his perception and memory. Hypothermia and hallucinations go hand in hand.
If only they had carried an EPIRB distress beacon. Hard to understand how anyone would go so far offshore in a small craft without one.
My condolences go out to you and to all concerned.
377
georger 268
QuoteDuane thought so, but McCoy didnt fit theQuote
I may have my facts wrong, but McCoy seemed like such a great fit but for the alibi.
377
physical description and with all his blood on the floor
the dna comparison was easy!
How many quarts does it take!![]()
That assumes that the FBI has Cooper's DNA. How can you be sure that they really do? If Cooper were really clever he could leave stuff that had other people's DNA on it. I wonder if your DNA could be extracted from your ties? Seems like a a tie, with no skin or hair contact, might not have the wearers DNA on it.
377
Cooper was not "clever". He hijacked and aeroplane,
for God's sake. He did not oxygenate the hemoglobin
molecule and get a Nobel Prize while trading in rare
metals!
This guy starts ringing bells at the moron scale.
The only question is how smart a dummy he was.
Duane by contrast was smart enough to stay home,
play with a wife, and conduct simple scams under the cover of facial hair .... and a delusional ego.
My grandfather used to have an IQ test: "You hitch
a mule to a goat to a pig to a chicken. Which would
you ride to town." You would be surprised how many
pick the chicken thinking its a trick question. Snowmman would!
georger 268
Quote
georger,
Quotewhy the new avatar? what am I missing"
It’s just a photo of afriendacquaintance that I used to enjoy talking with. Heiswas a real smart guy and Ienjoyenjoyed having friendly arguments and discussions.
Then one day, something went wrong in his life and he turned abrasive, cynical, and sometimes cruel. I really don’t know what it was. Whatever it was, I wish it hadn’t happened. Now, I just feel sorry for him.
Sluggo_Monster
We dont need this kind of thing here. Jo will think
he's an FBI agent! (talk to you soon. I havent forgotten)

georger 268
QuoteDon't let Jerry snow you - he called me a liar about the places I went and then I found these places with the help of the locals. He acted like he was interrogating some one in a war senario. The most unpleasant conversation of my life.
He refuses to acknowledge the places I went and that the developement in the area has taken over - what was farm and forest is now developement after developement. He claimed the places did not exist ever - and I had 4 witness (one is deceased).
One was doing a favor for his Aunt by acting as our guide - this man was trained to know when someone was lieing [{lying} ] ...check you PM's.
Jo. Jo! Reality check! How many tits on the average
Holstein at Fazio's?
snowmman 3
"Hate to be the party pooper again, but this is patently false. #1 & #3 are impossible"
Hey safe, are you saying #1 is impossible based on the Rataczak interviews or ???
could you outline the case for #1 being impossible.
(it may seem obvious to you and you might think it should be to me, but I've learned that I can never tell the train of thought people are following)
Seriously, just summarize your thoughts on #1 being impossible
(landing in Columbia)
(edit) good thoughts go out to Marquis and the others.
georger 268
QuoteWe'll have to wait for Tom to give us more on just what H. said, but from the little snippets Tom posted:
1) Did Himmelsbach really never talk to Rataczak until way,way after he retired? (one or both of them)
2) Ckret has told us there are Rataczak interviews where Bill talks about how they were before the Columbia (unclear how Bill knew) when they felt the bump, and how they could see the suburbs of Portland (or whatever it was he said) when they felt the bump.
So there must be some kind of critical "bump" related interview of Rataczak. That Ckret is quoting. But we don't know by who. We don't know when it was done.
Was it done before the drop test? Would they have zeroed in on "bump" details before the drop test? Maybe. Did they go back and interview Rataczak again after the drop test? Or just rely on Anderson's interpretation of "sameness" and maybe consult the transcripts for "oscillations" or maybe not read the Rat interview about "bump".
I had speculated before that the people who created the original DZ map just didn't have all the data (interviews etc). Ckret has speculated that it was more about misinterpretations of data.
Without seeing more background on this Rat/Bump interview info, even that might be of unknown provenance?
Mainly because even Himmelsbach seems to be stepping away from talking to Rataczak.
If Himmelsbach was not "all over" Rataczak and the bump issue, you'd think all of his personal theorization about DZ is fairly weak.
What am I missing?
Himmelsbach and Jerry seem closely aligned from what we know so far. I'm very curious about why Tom seems to think Jerry has new info. It would be very good if he did.
Pressure fluctuation.
I may have my facts wrong, but McCoy seemed like such a great fit but for the alibi.
Duane thought so, but McCoy didnt fit the377
physical description and with all his blood on the floor
the dna comparison was easy!
How many quarts does it take!
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