Poll

Do you believe Cooper lived or died. the option are below to cast a vote...

0% Cooper lived
6 (9.5%)
25% Cooper lived
4 (6.3%)
35% Cooper lived.
2 (3.2%)
50% Cooper lived
14 (22.2%)
75% Cooper lived
14 (22.2%)
100 Cooper lived
23 (36.5%)

Total Members Voted: 58

Author Topic: Clues, Documents And Evidence About The Case  (Read 1673531 times)

georger

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Re: Clues, Documents And Evidence About The Case
« Reply #2880 on: July 21, 2018, 04:16:45 AM »
Bulljax said: IMO, most likely the 3 packets/packages landed on TBAR as one rubber banded bundle.

[/quote]

There is a doc which describes in some detail exactly what the Ingrams found. It goes without saying you will reject that, so I wont waste my time further with you. This was all covered at DZ years ago, but your claims were rejected there too! 

'At approximately 9:45AM February 12, 1980, Harold Ingram and his wife Patricia Lynn Ingram, appeared at the Portland Office and furnished Portland case agent Ralph P. Himmelsbach with a plastic baggie containing several clumps of $20 bills, including those with the serial numbers previously listed, and additional serial numbers identifiable as part of the Cooper ransom.'

Let me paraphrase: 'The bills came out in clumps held together by sediment and rubber bands around each 'parcel'.

'Once at the apartment Harold's brother-in-law tried to separate the pieces and remove the pieces of rubber bands which were around each bundle. He wanted to dry out the money over night so they could try to reclaim it at a bank. The Ingrams tried to separate bills from each banded parcel ...'

It is very clear there were at least 2-3 bundles found with rubber bands around each bundle or parcel, however you care to term it. The brother-in-law and others testified he/they removed pieces of bands from at least 3 bundles.

Four more bills were turned in later and one of those bills reportedly had pieces of rubber bands on it. We have multiple banded parcels, total est value said to be $5900. All of this is consistent with the bank employee who wrapped each bundle with rubber bands. Everything was sent to the Lab for finger printing and analysis. There are also lab reports! But, none of this matters to a person as devoted to myth building and insults as you are.

   
« Last Edit: July 21, 2018, 05:30:03 AM by georger »
 

FLYJACK

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Re: Clues, Documents And Evidence About The Case
« Reply #2881 on: July 21, 2018, 10:04:47 AM »
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Bulljax said: IMO, most likely the 3 packets/packages landed on TBAR as one rubber banded bundle.


There is a doc which describes in some detail exactly what the Ingrams found. It goes without saying you will reject that, so I wont waste my time further with you. This was all covered at DZ years ago, but your claims were rejected there too! 

'At approximately 9:45AM February 12, 1980, Harold Ingram and his wife Patricia Lynn Ingram, appeared at the Portland Office and furnished Portland case agent Ralph P. Himmelsbach with a plastic baggie containing several clumps of $20 bills, including those with the serial numbers previously listed, and additional serial numbers identifiable as part of the Cooper ransom.'

Let me paraphrase: 'The bills came out in clumps held together by sediment and rubber bands around each 'parcel'.

'Once at the apartment Harold's brother-in-law tried to separate the pieces and remove the pieces of rubber bands which were around each bundle. He wanted to dry out the money over night so they could try to reclaim it at a bank. The Ingrams tried to separate bills from each banded parcel ...'

It is very clear there were at least 2-3 bundles found with rubber bands around each bundle or parcel, however you care to term it. The brother-in-law and others testified he/they removed pieces of bands from at least 3 bundles.

Four more bills were turned in later and one of those bills reportedly had pieces of rubber bands on it. We have multiple banded parcels, total est value said to be $5900. All of this is consistent with the bank employee who wrapped each bundle with rubber bands. Everything was sent to the Lab for finger printing and analysis. There are also lab reports! But, none of this matters to a person as devoted to myth building and insults as you are.

 

There is NO physical rubber band evidence. It is all hearsay.. the Ingrams have given vague and conflicting stories. that is nature of such events

The Bank never said they randomized and rubber banded the packets/packages, they said they randomized and rebanded the Bundles. These are specific terms for banks.

Your paraphrase appears to be a media report, but since you have a history of self serving distortions and fabrications I'll keep looking myself.

and

where did Snowmman get the idea that the Ingrams said one bundle didn't have rubber bands?


Ckret quote

"I found the cover sheets to the lab reports which summarize the findings. I also found the interviews of the Ingram family with regard to the recovery. I found the following:

The money was not stuck together with muck.

The money was found under just a few inches of sand.

They were still bundled with rubber bands, however, the bands crumbled to the touch when they picked them up.

The Ingrams took the money to their house and laid it out to dry.

The only thing in the lab report was that the money was consistent with being submerged in water and that sand recovered off the money was consistent with silt from the Columbia. "


Tom Kaye quote..

"We can't tell the original configuration of the three bundles. While Ingram might be able to comment, at this late date, it would have to be taken with a grain of salt. There were all sorts of conflicting stories on the find scenario. So much so that we are discounting any and all descriptions of how they found it except that it was buried in shallow sand and had rubber bands attached. In fact we are trying very hard not to use ANY modern testimony from anyone. Only original information/ testimony from the period in question. "
« Last Edit: July 21, 2018, 01:20:42 PM by FLYJACK »
 

Robert99

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Re: Clues, Documents And Evidence About The Case
« Reply #2882 on: July 21, 2018, 01:41:05 PM »
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Bulljax said: IMO, most likely the 3 packets/packages landed on TBAR as one rubber banded bundle.


There is a doc which describes in some detail exactly what the Ingrams found. It goes without saying you will reject that, so I wont waste my time further with you. This was all covered at DZ years ago, but your claims were rejected there too! 

'At approximately 9:45AM February 12, 1980, Harold Ingram and his wife Patricia Lynn Ingram, appeared at the Portland Office and furnished Portland case agent Ralph P. Himmelsbach with a plastic baggie containing several clumps of $20 bills, including those with the serial numbers previously listed, and additional serial numbers identifiable as part of the Cooper ransom.'

Let me paraphrase: 'The bills came out in clumps held together by sediment and rubber bands around each 'parcel'.

'Once at the apartment Harold's brother-in-law tried to separate the pieces and remove the pieces of rubber bands which were around each bundle. He wanted to dry out the money over night so they could try to reclaim it at a bank. The Ingrams tried to separate bills from each banded parcel ...'

It is very clear there were at least 2-3 bundles found with rubber bands around each bundle or parcel, however you care to term it. The brother-in-law and others testified he/they removed pieces of bands from at least 3 bundles.

Four more bills were turned in later and one of those bills reportedly had pieces of rubber bands on it. We have multiple banded parcels, total est value said to be $5900. All of this is consistent with the bank employee who wrapped each bundle with rubber bands. Everything was sent to the Lab for finger printing and analysis. There are also lab reports! But, none of this matters to a person as devoted to myth building and insults as you are.

 

There is NO physical rubber band evidence. It is all hearsay.. the Ingrams have given vague and conflicting stories. that is nature of such events

The Bank never said they randomized and rubber banded the packets/packages, they said they randomized and rebanded the Bundles. These are specific terms for banks.

Your paraphrase appears to be a media report, but since you have a history of self serving distortions and fabrications I'll keep looking myself.

and

where did Snowmman get the idea that the Ingrams said one bundle didn't have rubber bands?


Ckret quote

"I found the cover sheets to the lab reports which summarize the findings. I also found the interviews of the Ingram family with regard to the recovery. I found the following:

The money was not stuck together with muck.

The money was found under just a few inches of sand.

They were still bundled with rubber bands, however, the bands crumbled to the touch when they picked them up.

The Ingrams took the money to their house and laid it out to dry.

The only thing in the lab report was that the money was consistent with being submerged in water and that sand recovered off the money was consistent with silt from the Columbia. "


Tom Kaye quote..

"We can't tell the original configuration of the three bundles. While Ingram might be able to comment, at this late date, it would have to be taken with a grain of salt. There were all sorts of conflicting stories on the find scenario. So much so that we are discounting any and all descriptions of how they found it except that it was buried in shallow sand and had rubber bands attached. In fact we are trying very hard not to use ANY modern testimony from anyone. Only original information/ testimony from the period in question. "

Flyjack, your efforts to ignore all the physical evidence and to replace it with your own baseless scenario resembles the efforts of a certain politician in the USA to rewrite history.  In the matter of the politician, it is just a simple case of the chickens coming home to roost.
 

FLYJACK

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Re: Clues, Documents And Evidence About The Case
« Reply #2883 on: July 21, 2018, 02:07:27 PM »
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Bulljax said: IMO, most likely the 3 packets/packages landed on TBAR as one rubber banded bundle.


There is a doc which describes in some detail exactly what the Ingrams found. It goes without saying you will reject that, so I wont waste my time further with you. This was all covered at DZ years ago, but your claims were rejected there too! 

'At approximately 9:45AM February 12, 1980, Harold Ingram and his wife Patricia Lynn Ingram, appeared at the Portland Office and furnished Portland case agent Ralph P. Himmelsbach with a plastic baggie containing several clumps of $20 bills, including those with the serial numbers previously listed, and additional serial numbers identifiable as part of the Cooper ransom.'

Let me paraphrase: 'The bills came out in clumps held together by sediment and rubber bands around each 'parcel'.

'Once at the apartment Harold's brother-in-law tried to separate the pieces and remove the pieces of rubber bands which were around each bundle. He wanted to dry out the money over night so they could try to reclaim it at a bank. The Ingrams tried to separate bills from each banded parcel ...'

It is very clear there were at least 2-3 bundles found with rubber bands around each bundle or parcel, however you care to term it. The brother-in-law and others testified he/they removed pieces of bands from at least 3 bundles.

Four more bills were turned in later and one of those bills reportedly had pieces of rubber bands on it. We have multiple banded parcels, total est value said to be $5900. All of this is consistent with the bank employee who wrapped each bundle with rubber bands. Everything was sent to the Lab for finger printing and analysis. There are also lab reports! But, none of this matters to a person as devoted to myth building and insults as you are.

 

There is NO physical rubber band evidence. It is all hearsay.. the Ingrams have given vague and conflicting stories. that is nature of such events

The Bank never said they randomized and rubber banded the packets/packages, they said they randomized and rebanded the Bundles. These are specific terms for banks.

Your paraphrase appears to be a media report, but since you have a history of self serving distortions and fabrications I'll keep looking myself.

and

where did Snowmman get the idea that the Ingrams said one bundle didn't have rubber bands?


Ckret quote

"I found the cover sheets to the lab reports which summarize the findings. I also found the interviews of the Ingram family with regard to the recovery. I found the following:

The money was not stuck together with muck.

The money was found under just a few inches of sand.

They were still bundled with rubber bands, however, the bands crumbled to the touch when they picked them up.

The Ingrams took the money to their house and laid it out to dry.

The only thing in the lab report was that the money was consistent with being submerged in water and that sand recovered off the money was consistent with silt from the Columbia. "


Tom Kaye quote..

"We can't tell the original configuration of the three bundles. While Ingram might be able to comment, at this late date, it would have to be taken with a grain of salt. There were all sorts of conflicting stories on the find scenario. So much so that we are discounting any and all descriptions of how they found it except that it was buried in shallow sand and had rubber bands attached. In fact we are trying very hard not to use ANY modern testimony from anyone. Only original information/ testimony from the period in question. "

Flyjack, your efforts to ignore all the physical evidence and to replace it with your own baseless scenario resembles the efforts of a certain politician in the USA to rewrite history.  In the matter of the politician, it is just a simple case of the chickens coming home to roost.

What physical evidence?

I believe there were band fragments attached to the money when found, WHERE WERE THEY attached, evidence? that is all I ask..

Is there physical evidence or not?

All I get is personal attacks for asking that question.. people don't like their perceived reality being challenged.

BTW,, which certain politician? besides engaging in a logical fallacy,, they ALL try to rewrite history.. it is the nature of politics.
« Last Edit: July 21, 2018, 02:24:19 PM by FLYJACK »
 

Robert99

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Re: Clues, Documents And Evidence About The Case
« Reply #2884 on: July 21, 2018, 03:25:48 PM »
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Bulljax said: IMO, most likely the 3 packets/packages landed on TBAR as one rubber banded bundle.


There is a doc which describes in some detail exactly what the Ingrams found. It goes without saying you will reject that, so I wont waste my time further with you. This was all covered at DZ years ago, but your claims were rejected there too! 

'At approximately 9:45AM February 12, 1980, Harold Ingram and his wife Patricia Lynn Ingram, appeared at the Portland Office and furnished Portland case agent Ralph P. Himmelsbach with a plastic baggie containing several clumps of $20 bills, including those with the serial numbers previously listed, and additional serial numbers identifiable as part of the Cooper ransom.'

Let me paraphrase: 'The bills came out in clumps held together by sediment and rubber bands around each 'parcel'.

'Once at the apartment Harold's brother-in-law tried to separate the pieces and remove the pieces of rubber bands which were around each bundle. He wanted to dry out the money over night so they could try to reclaim it at a bank. The Ingrams tried to separate bills from each banded parcel ...'

It is very clear there were at least 2-3 bundles found with rubber bands around each bundle or parcel, however you care to term it. The brother-in-law and others testified he/they removed pieces of bands from at least 3 bundles.

Four more bills were turned in later and one of those bills reportedly had pieces of rubber bands on it. We have multiple banded parcels, total est value said to be $5900. All of this is consistent with the bank employee who wrapped each bundle with rubber bands. Everything was sent to the Lab for finger printing and analysis. There are also lab reports! But, none of this matters to a person as devoted to myth building and insults as you are.

 

There is NO physical rubber band evidence. It is all hearsay.. the Ingrams have given vague and conflicting stories. that is nature of such events

The Bank never said they randomized and rubber banded the packets/packages, they said they randomized and rebanded the Bundles. These are specific terms for banks.

Your paraphrase appears to be a media report, but since you have a history of self serving distortions and fabrications I'll keep looking myself.

and

where did Snowmman get the idea that the Ingrams said one bundle didn't have rubber bands?


Ckret quote

"I found the cover sheets to the lab reports which summarize the findings. I also found the interviews of the Ingram family with regard to the recovery. I found the following:

The money was not stuck together with muck.

The money was found under just a few inches of sand.

They were still bundled with rubber bands, however, the bands crumbled to the touch when they picked them up.

The Ingrams took the money to their house and laid it out to dry.

The only thing in the lab report was that the money was consistent with being submerged in water and that sand recovered off the money was consistent with silt from the Columbia. "


Tom Kaye quote..

"We can't tell the original configuration of the three bundles. While Ingram might be able to comment, at this late date, it would have to be taken with a grain of salt. There were all sorts of conflicting stories on the find scenario. So much so that we are discounting any and all descriptions of how they found it except that it was buried in shallow sand and had rubber bands attached. In fact we are trying very hard not to use ANY modern testimony from anyone. Only original information/ testimony from the period in question. "

Flyjack, your efforts to ignore all the physical evidence and to replace it with your own baseless scenario resembles the efforts of a certain politician in the USA to rewrite history.  In the matter of the politician, it is just a simple case of the chickens coming home to roost.

What physical evidence?

I believe there were band fragments attached to the money when found, WHERE WERE THEY attached, evidence? that is all I ask..

Is there physical evidence or not?

All I get is personal attacks for asking that question.. people don't like their perceived reality being challenged.

BTW,, which certain politician? besides engaging in a logical fallacy,, they ALL try to rewrite history.. it is the nature of politics.

Are you living in an Igloo at the North Pole? 
 

FLYJACK

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Re: Clues, Documents And Evidence About The Case
« Reply #2885 on: July 21, 2018, 04:11:51 PM »
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Bulljax said: IMO, most likely the 3 packets/packages landed on TBAR as one rubber banded bundle.


There is a doc which describes in some detail exactly what the Ingrams found. It goes without saying you will reject that, so I wont waste my time further with you. This was all covered at DZ years ago, but your claims were rejected there too! 

'At approximately 9:45AM February 12, 1980, Harold Ingram and his wife Patricia Lynn Ingram, appeared at the Portland Office and furnished Portland case agent Ralph P. Himmelsbach with a plastic baggie containing several clumps of $20 bills, including those with the serial numbers previously listed, and additional serial numbers identifiable as part of the Cooper ransom.'

Let me paraphrase: 'The bills came out in clumps held together by sediment and rubber bands around each 'parcel'.

'Once at the apartment Harold's brother-in-law tried to separate the pieces and remove the pieces of rubber bands which were around each bundle. He wanted to dry out the money over night so they could try to reclaim it at a bank. The Ingrams tried to separate bills from each banded parcel ...'

It is very clear there were at least 2-3 bundles found with rubber bands around each bundle or parcel, however you care to term it. The brother-in-law and others testified he/they removed pieces of bands from at least 3 bundles.

Four more bills were turned in later and one of those bills reportedly had pieces of rubber bands on it. We have multiple banded parcels, total est value said to be $5900. All of this is consistent with the bank employee who wrapped each bundle with rubber bands. Everything was sent to the Lab for finger printing and analysis. There are also lab reports! But, none of this matters to a person as devoted to myth building and insults as you are.

 

There is NO physical rubber band evidence. It is all hearsay.. the Ingrams have given vague and conflicting stories. that is nature of such events

The Bank never said they randomized and rubber banded the packets/packages, they said they randomized and rebanded the Bundles. These are specific terms for banks.

Your paraphrase appears to be a media report, but since you have a history of self serving distortions and fabrications I'll keep looking myself.

and

where did Snowmman get the idea that the Ingrams said one bundle didn't have rubber bands?


Ckret quote

"I found the cover sheets to the lab reports which summarize the findings. I also found the interviews of the Ingram family with regard to the recovery. I found the following:

The money was not stuck together with muck.

The money was found under just a few inches of sand.

They were still bundled with rubber bands, however, the bands crumbled to the touch when they picked them up.

The Ingrams took the money to their house and laid it out to dry.

The only thing in the lab report was that the money was consistent with being submerged in water and that sand recovered off the money was consistent with silt from the Columbia. "


Tom Kaye quote..

"We can't tell the original configuration of the three bundles. While Ingram might be able to comment, at this late date, it would have to be taken with a grain of salt. There were all sorts of conflicting stories on the find scenario. So much so that we are discounting any and all descriptions of how they found it except that it was buried in shallow sand and had rubber bands attached. In fact we are trying very hard not to use ANY modern testimony from anyone. Only original information/ testimony from the period in question. "

Flyjack, your efforts to ignore all the physical evidence and to replace it with your own baseless scenario resembles the efforts of a certain politician in the USA to rewrite history.  In the matter of the politician, it is just a simple case of the chickens coming home to roost.

What physical evidence?

I believe there were band fragments attached to the money when found, WHERE WERE THEY attached, evidence? that is all I ask..

Is there physical evidence or not?

All I get is personal attacks for asking that question.. people don't like their perceived reality being challenged.

BTW,, which certain politician? besides engaging in a logical fallacy,, they ALL try to rewrite history.. it is the nature of politics.

Are you living in an Igloo at the North Pole?

No, I can confirm that I have never been in an Igloo or to the North Pole...  but I am well aware of US politics, your "logical fallacy" can apply to all of them..

So, you have the rubber band physical evidence or not?
« Last Edit: July 21, 2018, 04:37:46 PM by FLYJACK »
 

Offline Shutter

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Re: Clues, Documents And Evidence About The Case
« Reply #2886 on: July 21, 2018, 04:26:11 PM »
Fly, what are you implying? since no evidence has been recovered it was never there?
 

FLYJACK

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Re: Clues, Documents And Evidence About The Case
« Reply #2887 on: July 21, 2018, 04:36:12 PM »
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Fly, what are you implying? since no evidence has been recovered it was never there?

No, I believe there were rubber band fragments found attached to the money,,, the issue is where were they exactly.. there is no physical evidence and only vague hearsay.

I am trying to determine if the 3 packages were in a single rubber banded bundle when they landed.

The Bank said they randomized the bundles (groups of packages) not the packets/packages. Ckret got that wrong..  3 packets/packages could have been one randomized bundle

For example, if the money fell out of a bag you'd expect the bundle (group of packages) rubber bands to be present.. or if Cooper landed there... or if was buried... etc.

Everyone is claiming it is settled that the Rubber bands were around each individual package even though there is no physical evidence, well then where are the rubber bands for the bundle (group of packages). They went to Cooper that way..

Those rubber band fragments may have been from the bundle (group of packages)
« Last Edit: July 21, 2018, 04:42:07 PM by FLYJACK »
 

Robert99

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Re: Clues, Documents And Evidence About The Case
« Reply #2888 on: July 21, 2018, 04:47:11 PM »
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Fly, what are you implying? since no evidence has been recovered it was never there?

The Bank said they randomized the bundles (groups of packages) not the packets/packages. Ckret got that wrong..
 

Everything I have seen indicates that the Bank and/or FBI randomized the "bills", not the "bundles".
 

FLYJACK

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Re: Clues, Documents And Evidence About The Case
« Reply #2889 on: July 21, 2018, 05:00:50 PM »
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Fly, what are you implying? since no evidence has been recovered it was never there?

The Bank said they randomized the bundles (groups of packages) not the packets/packages. Ckret got that wrong..
 

Everything I have seen indicates that the Bank and/or FBI randomized the "bills", not the "bundles".

Robert99,,

Sorry, let me clarify, this is important.

Correct the bills were circulated and serial numbers randomized well before the hijacking..

But, I am referring to the bundles which are multiples of (x100 $20 bills) = $2000.

Before the ransom delivery the Bank randomized and re-rubber banded the bundles to make them look hastily prepared. Normally they are rubber banded into ONE bundle ($10000) of 5 packets/packages (x100 $20 = $2000)..

one packet/package = 100 x $20 = $2000
one bundle = 5 packet/packages = $10000

They opened each bundle of 5 packets/packages and re-rubber banded them in random groups of packages/packets.

Cooper ransom = single bundles were randomized 3, 4, 5, 6?  packages/packets per bundle.

So, 3 packets/packages like TBAR may have been one single randomized rubber banded bundle..


« Last Edit: July 21, 2018, 05:12:59 PM by FLYJACK »
 

Robert99

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Re: Clues, Documents And Evidence About The Case
« Reply #2890 on: July 21, 2018, 06:00:16 PM »
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Fly, what are you implying? since no evidence has been recovered it was never there?

The Bank said they randomized the bundles (groups of packages) not the packets/packages. Ckret got that wrong..
 

Everything I have seen indicates that the Bank and/or FBI randomized the "bills", not the "bundles".

Robert99,,

Sorry, let me clarify, this is important.

Correct the bills were circulated and serial numbers randomized well before the hijacking..

But, I am referring to the bundles which are multiples of (x100 $20 bills) = $2000.

Before the ransom delivery the Bank randomized and re-rubber banded the bundles to make them look hastily prepared. Normally they are rubber banded into ONE bundle ($10000) of 5 packets/packages (x100 $20 = $2000)..

one packet/package = 100 x $20 = $2000
one bundle = 5 packet/packages = $10000

They opened each bundle of 5 packets/packages and re-rubber banded them in random groups of packages/packets.

Cooper ransom = single bundles were randomized 3, 4, 5, 6?  packages/packets per bundle.

So, 3 packets/packages like TBAR may have been one single randomized rubber banded bundle..

Before being put into Cooper's money bag, the randomized bills were put into different size bundles.  Some bundles had noticeably more than 100 bills per bundle and some had noticeable less than 100 bills per bundle.  This was intentionally done in order to give Cooper the impression that putting the ransom together was a rush job and that the bill serial numbers were not recorded.  There were about 100 total bundles in the ransom, but that does not mean that each bundle contained exactly 100 bills.

There is no evidence whatsoever that any of these approximately 100 bundles were tied together in any manner.  How banks bundle money in their own vaults is not how the money was bundled to put in Cooper's money bag.  The fact that three bundles of bills contained approximately $6000 and that a bit less than $6000 was found at Tina Bar is purely a coincidence and doesn't mean anything.
« Last Edit: July 21, 2018, 10:38:36 PM by Robert99 »
 

FLYJACK

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Re: Clues, Documents And Evidence About The Case
« Reply #2891 on: July 21, 2018, 07:08:15 PM »
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Fly, what are you implying? since no evidence has been recovered it was never there?

The Bank said they randomized the bundles (groups of packages) not the packets/packages. Ckret got that wrong..
 

Everything I have seen indicates that the Bank and/or FBI randomized the "bills", not the "bundles".

Robert99,,

Sorry, let me clarify, this is important.

Correct the bills were circulated and serial numbers randomized well before the hijacking..

But, I am referring to the bundles which are multiples of (x100 $20 bills) = $2000.

Before the ransom delivery the Bank randomized and re-rubber banded the bundles to make them look hastily prepared. Normally they are rubber banded into ONE bundle ($10000) of 5 packets/packages (x100 $20 = $2000)..

one packet/package = 100 x $20 = $2000
one bundle = 5 packet/packages = $10000

They opened each bundle of 5 packets/packages and re-rubber banded them in random groups of packages/packets.

Cooper ransom = single bundles were randomized 3, 4, 5, 6?  packages/packets per bundle.

So, 3 packets/packages like TBAR may have been one single randomized rubber banded bundle..

Before being put into Cooper's money bag, the randomized bills were put into different size bundles.  Some bundles had noticeably more than 100 bills per bundle and some had noticeable less than 100 bills per bundle.  This was intentionally done in order to give Cooper the impression that putting the ransom together was a rush job and that the bill serial numbers were not recorded.  There were about 100 total bundles in the ransom, but that does not mean that each bundle contained exactly 100 bills.

There is no evidence whatsoever that any of these approximately 100 bundles were tied together in any manner.  How banks bundle money in their own vaults is now how the money was bundled to put in Cooper's money bag.  The fact that three bundles of bills contained approximately $6000 and that a bit less than $6000 was found at Tina Bar is purely a coincidence and doesn't mean anything.

That was the error Ckret made and screwed everything up.. 10 years ago.

The bank said BUNDLES, that is very specific banking terminology, it does NOT mean packages. Easy for the rest of us to conflate the terms.

Ckret thought they meant the packages when they said bundles.. for ten years everyone thought the packets/packages (x100 bills) were randomized. TBAR packages weren't randomized << I posted this before and nobody got my point, how could the ransom packages be randomized but not TBAR, finally Shutter told me stop posting.. but I finally figured it out. It wasn't the packages that were randomized it was the bundles, but people conflated the terminology.

Make sense now, TBAR packages were in 100's, they weren't randomized. The ransom money was rubber banded in random bundles of packages..  This is why the terminology is crucial.

The takeaway is the 3 TBAR packages (x100 bills) may have been a single randomized and rubber banded bundle. That would explain why they were found together. 1 BUNDLE of 3 packages of 100 bills, (a few missing/deteriorated from one).

The exact location of the rubber bands found on the money may confirm this.. that is why I am obsessed with finding any physical evidence and that is why I reject the idea that it is settled. Everyone has had this wrong for 10 years, bundles were randomized not packages.
« Last Edit: July 21, 2018, 07:15:00 PM by FLYJACK »
 

Offline Shutter

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Re: Clues, Documents And Evidence About The Case
« Reply #2892 on: July 21, 2018, 10:39:15 PM »
ENOUGH of the bullshit guys...

both of you are suspended for two days. either this forum gets back on track or it will no longer exist!

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Robert99

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Re: Clues, Documents And Evidence About The Case
« Reply #2893 on: July 22, 2018, 07:09:19 PM »
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here it is...

Does this match Kaye's coordinates?

Here is Kaye's overlay chart from his original website. Shows money location and todays road vs road in 1980.

I have to agree with Shutter's comment on the above.  It just doesn't seem to agree with the landscape.

The coordinates that Tom Kaye gives for the money find location (yellow pin) are: Latitude North 45.717888 degrees which is North 45 degrees, 11.96 minutes; Longitude West 122.759500 degrees which is West 122 degrees, 45.57 minutes.  These are in the WGS84 grid coordinate system.

I have a copy of the of the National Geographics Topographical maps on disks for Washington State and they are also in the WGS84 grid coordinate system.  I enlarged the map for the Tina Bar area as much as possible and the Tina Bar gate area was the location that I could determine best.  So I measured the coordinates for the Tina Bar gate as follows:  Latitude North 45 degrees, 43.00 minutes; Longitude West 122 degrees, 34.20 minutes.

The agreement with the above sets of coordinates is not very good.  I would have expected better.  Nevertheless, based on several visits to Tina Bar and other information, I am convinced that the money was found south of the white line (extended to the water's edge) that runs off to the Northeast above the containment pit.

This would put the find location at the southern edge (or perhaps slightly further south) of the penciled circle on the 1979 aerial photograph, well within the penciled circle on the 1974 aerial photograph, and about the southern edge of the penciled circle on the 1970 aerial map.


 
 

Offline Shutter

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Re: Clues, Documents And Evidence About The Case
« Reply #2894 on: July 22, 2018, 07:22:26 PM »
google distance is no longer a free site  >:(