Welcome | Join Now

Sign In

[x]

By signing in, you agree to abide by the Terms & Conditions.

E-mail this page to a friend

Press Release - March 31, 2008

"D.B. Cooper" Skyjacking Cash in Dallas Auction

Dallas, TX: A dozen $20 bills from the infamous 1971 "D. B. Cooper" skyjacking will be offered to the public for the first time in June by Heritage Auction Galleries of Dallas, Texas. The notes are owned by Brian Ingram, 36, of Mena, Arkansas who was eight years old in 1980 when he found the only ransom money ever discovered from the still-unsolved skyjacking.

"The serial numbers all match the FBI's list of $20 bills given to the skyjacker known as 'D.B. Cooper' who parachuted from a jetliner with the cash somewhere between Seattle Washington and Reno, Nevada during a rainstorm on November 24, 1971. Some of these tattered notes have the initials of investigators who examined the recovered money after Ingram found it along the banks of the Columbia River near Vancouver, Washington in February 1980," said Steve Ivy, Co-Chairman of Heritage and a long-time paper money collector.

The D.B. Cooper cash will be offered as part of a big auction of Americana memorabilia in Dallas and online, June 13 and 14.

Ingram said the money almost didn't survive its discovery.

"We were going to make a fire along the river bank," Ingram recalled. "I was on my hands and knees smoothing out the sand with my arm, and I uncovered three bundles of money just below the surface. My uncle thought we should throw it in the fire."

Ingram found approximately $5,800 of the $200,000 ransom given to the skyjacker, and the FBI later returned a small portion to his family.

Ingram owns 84 D.B. Cooper bills and fragments.

"Fifteen of the $20 denomination bills will be offered to the public for the first time in the upcoming auction. His decision to sell the notes was made several weeks before the recent discovery of what may be the skyjacker's parachute. The coincidental timing couldn't be better," said Ivy.

The recovered ransom notes were authenticated in February and placed into protective, archival storage holders by PCGS Currency, a Santa Ana, California paper money authentication service. Each holder has a label with the FBI's 1971 artist's sketch of the sunglasses-wearing skyjacking suspect who has still not been found.

Anyone with information about the skyjacking is encouraged to contact the FBI's Seattle office by e-mail at fbise@leo.gov. Additional information about the auction will be available from Heritage Auction Galleries, online at www.HA.com, and by phone at (800) 872-6467.



E-mail this page to a friend

Heritage delivers Value - $673,960,269 sold at auction and in private treaty sales over the past 12 months.

Our 79,007 Historical Collectible bidder-members and 496,352 Heritage bidder-members overall from 164 countries enjoy all these free benefits:

  1. Bid on-line
  2. Free Collector newsletter
  3. Want List with instant e-mail notifications
  4. Auction Archives (prices, photos, full descriptions, etc.)
  5. Hall of Fame
  6. Reduced auction
    commissions when
    you resell your
    winnings 

Members Sign In


Free Newsletter and Announcements!

Quality Consignments Wanted

Only 20 days left to consign to the 2010 June Beverly Hills, CA Signature Natural History Auction!

We expect to have one of our Consignment Directors visiting your area soon. Please call to arrange an appointment.

E-mail Douglass Brown or call
1-800-872-6467 x1165

Video Video: Why Consign?

View traffic of HA.com vs. other auctions on Compete.com