Dan Cooper
Victory Salute
Richard Floyd McCoy, Jr. (December 7, 1942 – November 9, 1974) was an American aircraft hijacker.
McCoy hijacked a United Airlines passenger jet for ransom in 1972. Due to a similar modus operandi, law enforcement officials named McCoy as a suspect for the still-unidentified "DB Cooper"," who committed his unsolved crime four months before McCoy.
On April 7, 1972, McCoy boarded United Airlines Flight 855 under the alias "James Johnson" during a stopover in Denver Colorado. The aircraft was a Boeing 727 with aft stairs (the same equipment used in the DB Cooper incident), via which McCoy escaped in mid-flight by parachute after giving the crew similar instructions as Cooper had.
McCoy had obtained a $500,000 cash ransom, and carried a novelty hand-grenade and an empty pistol. Police began investigating McCoy following a tip from a motorist. The driver had picked up McCoy hitch-hiking at a fast-food restaurant, where McCoy was wearing a jumpsuit and carrying a duffel bag. McCoy had also described to an acquaintance how easy it would be to carry out such a hijacking.
Following fingerprint and handwriting matches, McCoy was arrested two days after the hijacking. Ironically, McCoy was on National Guard duty flying one of the helicopters involved in the search for the hijacker.
Inside his house, FBI agents found a jumpsuit and a duffel bag filled with cash totaling $499,970.
McCoy claimed innocence, but was convicted of the hijacking and received a 45-year sentence.Once incarcerated at the Federal penitentiary at Lewisburg Pennsylvania, McCoy used his access to the prison's dental office to fashion a fake handgun out of dental paste.
He and a crew of convicts escaped on August 10, 1974 by commandeering a garbage truck and crashing it through the prison's main gate.
Three months later the FBI located McCoy in Virginia Beach, Virginia. News reports stated that on November 9, 1974, McCoy walked into his home and was met by FBI agents;he fired at them, and an agent fired back with a shotgun, killing McCoy.
> Care of Wikipedia.
McCoy hijacked a United Airlines passenger jet for ransom in 1972. Due to a similar modus operandi, law enforcement officials named McCoy as a suspect for the still-unidentified "DB Cooper"," who committed his unsolved crime four months before McCoy.
On April 7, 1972, McCoy boarded United Airlines Flight 855 under the alias "James Johnson" during a stopover in Denver Colorado. The aircraft was a Boeing 727 with aft stairs (the same equipment used in the DB Cooper incident), via which McCoy escaped in mid-flight by parachute after giving the crew similar instructions as Cooper had.
McCoy had obtained a $500,000 cash ransom, and carried a novelty hand-grenade and an empty pistol. Police began investigating McCoy following a tip from a motorist. The driver had picked up McCoy hitch-hiking at a fast-food restaurant, where McCoy was wearing a jumpsuit and carrying a duffel bag. McCoy had also described to an acquaintance how easy it would be to carry out such a hijacking.
Following fingerprint and handwriting matches, McCoy was arrested two days after the hijacking. Ironically, McCoy was on National Guard duty flying one of the helicopters involved in the search for the hijacker.
Inside his house, FBI agents found a jumpsuit and a duffel bag filled with cash totaling $499,970.
McCoy claimed innocence, but was convicted of the hijacking and received a 45-year sentence.Once incarcerated at the Federal penitentiary at Lewisburg Pennsylvania, McCoy used his access to the prison's dental office to fashion a fake handgun out of dental paste.
He and a crew of convicts escaped on August 10, 1974 by commandeering a garbage truck and crashing it through the prison's main gate.
Three months later the FBI located McCoy in Virginia Beach, Virginia. News reports stated that on November 9, 1974, McCoy walked into his home and was met by FBI agents;he fired at them, and an agent fired back with a shotgun, killing McCoy.
> Care of Wikipedia.





