CBS/AP/ August 1, 2011, 6:57 AM

D.B. Cooper case: "Promising" FBI lead fizzles

Update, 5:30 p.m. ET: A law enforcement official tells CBS News correspondent Bob Orr that "promising lead" reported here and elsewhere has apparently washed out. The FBI had been tipped that a man who died about 10 years ago might have been Cooper. An item once belonging to that man was analyzed for fingerprints in an effort to match prints found aboard the plane D.B. Cooper hijacked. No usable prints were found on the item.

The FBI has not officially cleared this latest potential suspect, but sources tell CBS News they are in the process of ruling him out.

In over 40 years since the Cooper hijacking, officials have investigated more than 1,000 potential suspects, and while FBI officials continue pursuing a number of information streams, the skyjacking mystery endures.


SEATTLE -- The FBI says it has a "credible" lead in the D.B. Cooper case involving the 1971 hijacking of a passenger jet over Washington state and the suspect's legendary parachute escape.

The fate and identity of the hijacker dubbed "D.B. Cooper" has remained a mystery in the 40 years since a man jumped from a Northwest Orient Airlines 727 flight with $200,000 in ransom.

The recent tip provided to the FBI came from a law enforcement member who directed investigators to a person who might have helpful information on the suspect, FBI spokeswoman Ayn Sandalo Dietrich told The Seattle Times on Sunday. She called the new information the "most promising lead we have right now," but cautioned that investigators were not on the verge of breaking the case.

"With any lead, our first step is to assess how credible it is," Sandalo Dietrich told the Seattle Post Intelligencer on Saturday. "Having this come through another law enforcement (agency), having looked it over when we got it — it seems pretty interesting."

Dietrich says an item belonging to the suspect was sent to a lab in Virginia for forensic testing.

But Geoffrey Grey, author of "Skyjack: The Hunt for D.B. Cooper," tells CBS News finding fingerprints on the item may be difficult.

"When this case happened in the 1970s," Grey points out, "the era of DNA was not upon us, and agents really didn't look out to preserve this evidence in the way we do now."

Dietrich did not provide specifics about the item or the man's identity.

Federal investigators have checked more than 1,000 leads since the suspect bailed out on Nov. 24, 1971, over the Pacific Northwest, and there have been several deathbed confessions, Orr says.

The man who jumped gave his name as Dan Cooper, but Orr notes that no one knows if he survived, or even if he gave his real name. Some believe he was inspired by Canadian comic Dan Cooper, a test pilot who parachuted from planes.

The man claimed shortly after takeoff in Portland, Oregon, that he had a bomb, leading the flight crew to land the plane in Seattle, where passengers were exchanged for parachutes and ransom money.

The flight then took off for Mexico with the suspect and flight crew on board, before the man parachuted from the plane.

This may, Orr observes, be the best clue since 1980, when an eight-year-old boy in Washington State discovered nearly $6,000 cash during a family picnic. The serial numbers matched those of the ransom money.

Word of the FBI's newest tip was first reported by The Telegraph newspaper in London.

© 2011 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
23 Comments Add a Comment
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Bojax39 says:
So the artifact didn't have fingerprints. Most Americans will have at least one fingerprint on file what with some banks demanding thumbprints for certain transactions or some states wanting them for various permits and licenses. Coroners take them too for positive ID. Just because the guy's dead doesn't mean something belonging to him is the only source.

But come to that, why the hell is money being wasted on a 40 year old cold case which has no relevance?

Want to arrest some criminals? Look at the records of some of our political office holders. Their whole careers have be a crime, (as well as a damned shame).
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expatriate2 says:
I wonder if Scotland Yard is still investigating Jack the Ripper?
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Okiefolks says:
Take whatever money was spent on that case and cut it from the FBI's budget. Do likewise on the other hairbrained wastes of time and resources and maybe we will have one of our out-of-control government bureauocracies halfway under control. What a waste of taxpayer's money!
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Darkknight55 says:
Wow, did somebody jump the gun on this one? Last night I read where they had a promising lead and I was the first one here to reply on that BS. Now I read where their "promising" lead fizzled out. I really hate "I told you so's", but....
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username555-2009 says:
This just in - Amelia Earhart still missing.
Thanks for nothing; if you hear from Judge Crater, let us know...
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JavMD says:
interesting: few years ago, kids in a field saw the half buried parachute, implying to me, he (successfully) made the jump, BUT why were some of the bills on the 'bank' of the river, found again a few years ago?

If he buried the chute he would have been obviously 'living' though maybe superhurt (jumped during a fierce storm I understand).

That to me would explain why he lost some of the 'money' I would look for the guy as having died along the river, short time after successfully buring the parachute. Merely connect the two dots. WHere the chute was buried, to where the some money was found. traceback up the river. he probably tried to cross it and lost some money, I would have thought if he was 'healthy' he would have spent time retrieving it. need to go back and check all medical records at hospitals and doctors in the area for giving help at the time period near this 'site'.

Unsolved mysteries... i have no problem spending time when they have it, as long as they are working on more relevant cases also.
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Darkknight55 replies:
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JavMD, I remember seeing that same story. Now if they couldn't find anything then why would they now? I wonder if this whole thing is just a case they save for the newbies in the FBI while the seasoned agents are working some more relevant cases.
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straightmate says:
After all these years that guy is dead and gone and nobody outside the FBI dork office could possibly care. He got away and these idiots that call themselves agents are still after him? The only fools dumb enough to work this case are the people that should be pushed out the door. Seems to me that if the FBI has this sort of resources to waste their budget might need an overhaul.
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Montana5 replies:
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Take a deep breath and relax. Doesn't take a lot of resources to send an item to forensics for fingerprint testing....seems to me they'd be derelict not to.
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snaptrap1-2009 says:
What a waste of time and money...Doesn't the FBI have nothing better to do than chase after this ghost? Just how much in tax dollars have they spend over these forty something years? I think most people would want our FBI to spending there time better and our tax dollars better than this...the real loser are the taxpayers...this guy just got away with it...FBI, please move on and leave this ghost to the history books...
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usadvisor101 says:
yeah....meanwhile drug cartel mules and nutcases are hoping over the border. and the worlds largest opium ring,the karzai govt in afghanistan, is flooding the streets with cheap heroin.
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usadvisor101 says:
yeah....meanwhile drug cartel mules and nutcases are hoping over the border. and the worlds largest opium ring,the karzai govt in afghanistan, is flooding the streets with cheap heroin.
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