Tunes, musings and the all too brief fleeting inspiration of a halfwit, scribbled clumsily on the back of an electronic cigarette packet.

 

mills:

In November 1971, a man traveling under the name Dan Cooper hijacked a Boeing 727 en route from Portland to Seattle. After communicating to the flight attendant that he had a bomb in his briefcase, he demanded $200,000 and four parachutes, to be delivered after the plane landed. After receiving his ransom and releasing the passengers, Cooper ordered the pilots to take off and fly to Mexico, but while in the air over Washington state he lowered the rear stairs of the aircraft and jumped out, never to be seen again.
As if his story, with too many astonishing details to mention here, weren’t enough, four months later a man named Richard McCoy Jr. copied Cooper’s crime, but demanded $500,000. Because he bragged, and because he hitchhiked wearing a flightsuit afterward, McCoy was captured. He later escaped from prison and spent three months on the lam before being killed in a shoot-out with the FBI.
That these men successfully carried out skyjackings of commercial Boeing jets and bailed out over the United States strongly suggests to me that the 1970s were awesome.

mills:

In November 1971, a man traveling under the name Dan Cooper hijacked a Boeing 727 en route from Portland to Seattle. After communicating to the flight attendant that he had a bomb in his briefcase, he demanded $200,000 and four parachutes, to be delivered after the plane landed. After receiving his ransom and releasing the passengers, Cooper ordered the pilots to take off and fly to Mexico, but while in the air over Washington state he lowered the rear stairs of the aircraft and jumped out, never to be seen again.

As if his story, with too many astonishing details to mention here, weren’t enough, four months later a man named Richard McCoy Jr. copied Cooper’s crime, but demanded $500,000. Because he bragged, and because he hitchhiked wearing a flightsuit afterward, McCoy was captured. He later escaped from prison and spent three months on the lam before being killed in a shoot-out with the FBI.

That these men successfully carried out skyjackings of commercial Boeing jets and bailed out over the United States strongly suggests to me that the 1970s were awesome.

  1. stephenhanson reblogged this from mills
  2. dandelo reblogged this from mills
  3. woody reblogged this from mills and added:
    Haha, great last sentence! I have read about...only “truely successful” skyjackings
  4. christiansalvadorbananas reblogged this from proudpbskid and added:
    I’v never heard of this, people these days are soft. I included.
  5. abcsoupdot reblogged this from mills
  6. dandywolves reblogged this from proudpbskid and added:
    Yessss, I was just reading about Dan Cooper last night! Pretty sure the 70s are my favorite decade right now. (Also,...
  7. beenthinking reblogged this from mills and added:
    more captivating tale of relatively innocent modern crime, I don’t know it. What’s better fuel for dreams than
  8. jasencomstock reblogged this from mills
  9. deadliftpoetry reblogged this from mills
  10. thetitle reblogged this from mills
  11. proudpbskid reblogged this from mills and added:
    Yeah, it’s stories like this...alive in the 70s.
  12. michelvis reblogged this from mills
  13. nudawn reblogged this from mills and added:
    you dont follow him already you’re stupid
  14. allen reblogged this from somethingchanged
  15. littlewhiskey reblogged this from mills
  16. somethingchanged reblogged this from mills
  17. erhebung reblogged this from mills