Read The Skies Belong to Us: Love and Terror in the Golden Age of Hijacking Online

Authors: Brendan I. Koerner

Tags: #True Crime, #20th Century, #United States, #Nonfiction, #Biography & Autobiography, #Terrorism

The Skies Belong to Us: Love and Terror in the Golden Age of Hijacking (40 page)

BOOK: The Skies Belong to Us: Love and Terror in the Golden Age of Hijacking
2.93Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

75
perchè m’arresti?:
“Hijacker Subject of Italian Film,”
Tuscaloosa News
, Dec. 6, 1969.

76
“flew across the skies”:
“Lex Romana,”
Time
, May 3, 1971.

77
a spaghetti Western:
Rich,
Flying Scared
, 138.

78
cross the Atlantic:
“Would-Be Hijacker’s Apology Too Late,” Associated Press, Jul. 5, 2009.

79
voicing opposition:
“Plane Hijacking Assailed by U.N.,”
News and Courier
(Charleston, S.C.), Dec. 13, 1969.

80
around the world:
Arey,
Sky Pirates
, 330–31.

4. Sweet Black Angel

  
1
on Newport Avenue:
Willie Roger Holder, interview by author, Aug. 2011.

  
2
whiff of the taboo:
Elizabeth Olson (formerly Newhouse), interview by author, May 2011; “Hijackers Traced to San Diego Area,”
New York Times
, Jun. 5, 1972.

  
3
girl from Coos Bay:
Holder interview.

  
4
reedy Vietnam vet:
Elizabeth Newhouse (later Olson), interview by FBI, Coos Bay, Ore., Jun. 9, 1972 (obtained through FOIA request).

  
5
con man at heart:
Olson interview.

  
6
Holder as an Oreo:
Ibid.; Newhouse, FBI interview.

  
7
his son’s surrender:
Holder interview.

  
8
its enlistees deserted:
“Vietnam War Produces Highest U.S. Desertion Rate,”
Evening News
(Newburgh, N.Y.), Nov. 11, 1972.

  
9
accept “bad papers”:
“Black Veterans: The Forgotten Victims of Vietnam,”
Ebony
, Sept. 1974, 33–40.

10
any further medical care:
Holder interview.

11
visit his twin daughters:
Seavenes and Marie Holder, interview by FBI, San Diego, Calif., Jun. 3, 1972 (FOIA).

12
place of their own:
Olson interview.

13
who she was dating:
Patricia Kerkow, interview by FBI, Coos Bay, Ore., Jun. 4, 1972 (FOIA).

14
much of her supply:
Olson interview.

15
understanding of the Zodiac:
Newhouse, FBI interview; Holder interview.

16
trial of Angela Davis:
Holder interview.

17
Communist Party members:
“UCLA Teacher Is Ousted as Red,”
New York Times
, Sept. 20, 1969.

18
and Frederick Douglass:
Angela Davis,
Lectures on Liberation
(New York: New York Committee to Free Angela Davis, 1971),
http://archive.org/details/LecturesOnLiberation
.

19
“and are proud of”:
Catherine
Ellis and Stephen Drury Smith, eds.,
Say It Loud: Great Speeches on Civil Rights and African-American Identity
(New York: New Press, 2010), 189.

20
multiple gunshot wounds:
“Abductors, Judge Slain in Shootout,”
Palm Beach Post
, Aug. 8, 1970; “The Facts Behind the Angela Davis Case,”
Human Events
, Jun. 17, 1972, 9–15.

21
tight-fitting wig:
“FBI Seizes Angela Davis in Motel Here,”
New York Times
, Oct. 14, 1970.

22
in January 1971:
Bettina Aptheker,
The Morning Breaks: The Trial of Angela Davis
(Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press, 1999), 26.

23
the Ku Klux Klan:
“Defendant Kicks Attorney in Face,”
Bangor
(Me.)
Daily News
, May 28, 1971.

24
the courtroom theatrics:
“Few Spectators at Magee’s Trial,”
New York Times
, Dec. 31 1972.

25
concept of force:
“Angela Davis Trial to Put San Jose on Map for Sure,”
Tuscaloosa News
, Jan. 4, 1972.

26
“release Miss Davis”:
“The Kremlin See Angela Davis as an Angela of Communism,”
Afro-American
(Washington, D.C.), Apr. 13, 1971.

27
teachings of Jesus Christ:
“The Communist Dairy Farmer Who Bailed Out Angela Davis,”
Life
, March 10, 1972, 73.

28
“my life-long husband”:
“The Facts Behind the Angela Davis Case,” 12.

29
directed only at him:
Holder interview.

5. “I’m Here and I Exist”

  
1
“the usual air traveler”:
James Arey,
The Sky Pirates
(New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1972), 241.

  
2
concern about one’s luggage:
H. L. Reighard and John T. Dailey,
Task Force on Deterrence of Air Piracy: Final Report
(Washington, D.C.: FAA Office of Aviation Medicine, 1978), 58–60; “Airlines Screen for Skyjackers,”
Washington Post
, Feb. 8, 1972.

  
3
or incendiary devices:
David H. Brown with John T. Dailey,
Nine/Eleven: Could the Federal Aviation Administration Alone Have Deterred the Terrorist Skyjackers?
(Bloomington, Ind.: AuthorHouse, 2004), 15–19.

  
4
offense at the intrusion:
Ibid., 20–21.

  
5
or narcotics charges:
Reighard and Dailey,
Task Force on Deterrence of Air Piracy
, 5.

  
6
done to prevent hijackings:
Brown and Dailey,
Nine/Eleven
, 28.

  
7
screening was in force:
Ibid., 23.

  
8
pay for their insolence:
“Jet Hijacker, Lured by Ransom, Captured in Capital,”
New York Times
, Jun. 5, 1970.

  
9
kissed her goodbye:
“The $100 Million Skyjack,”
Time
, Jun. 15, 1970.

10
National Airport:
“Skyjacker Beat Detector Test,”
Gazette
(Montreal), Jun. 6, 1970.

11
light a match:
“Jet Hijacker, Lured by Ransom, Captured in Capital.”

12
shot by the flight’s captain:
“Airliner Copilot Killed,”
St. Petersburg Independent
, Mar. 18, 1970.

13
“unfit to rule”:
“Jet Hijacker, Lured by Ransom, Captured in Capital.”

14
“Never go alone”:
“The $100 Million Skyjack.”

15
a populated area:
“Hijacked Jet Shadowed by Fighters,”
Boston Globe
, Jun. 6, 1970.

16
shot out its landing gear:
“Jet Hijacker, Lured by Ransom, Captured in Capital.”

17
since the hijacking began:
Roger Buchanan, “The Joy of Being Hijacked,”
North American Review
256, no. 4 (Winter 1971), 2–4.

18
his gun to fire:
Ibid.

19
from his busted nose:
“$100 Million Hijacker Lured to Capture by Phony Cash,”
Boston Globe
, Jun. 5, 1970.

20
“he made it worse”:
“Hijacker’s Discontent Is Traced to the Loss of His Job in 1963,”
New York Times
, Jun. 5, 1970; “He Battled the ‘System,’ ”
Windsor Star
, Jun. 5, 1970.

21
by his final hostage:
“Pictures on Board a Hijacked Plane,”
Life
, Jun. 19, 1970, 30–31.

22
questions about its design:
“Castro Looks at the First Boeing 747 to Be Hijacked,”
Ludington
(Mich.)
Daily News
, Aug. 1, 1970.

23
accomplice on board:
“Plane Diverted to Cuba by Hijacker Who ‘Fooled’ Pilot,”
Warsaw
(Ind.)
Times Union
, Aug. 25, 1970.

24
calling him “nigger”:
“Hijacker Sentenced,”
Lawrence Daily Journal-World
, Oct. 25, 1975.

25
with Pentagon ties:
“Nixon Jabs Congress,”
St. Petersburg Times
, Sept. 12, 1970.

26
stretched back her cheekbones:
“ ‘I Made the Ring from a Bullet and the Pin of a Hand Grenade,’ ”
Guardian
, Jan. 26, 2001.

27
planes’ blackened wreckage:
News footage of Dawson’s Field hijackings,
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AVIj_RF-lp0
and
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5de6fYWKDWU
.

28
by executive order:
“Plea on Hostages Is Made by Rogers,”
New York Times
, Sept. 9, 1970.

29
“assembled and trained”:
“The Nixon Announcement,”
New York Times
, Sept. 12, 1970.

30
$80 million per year:
“Sky Marshals to Be Costly,”
Gettysburg Times
, Sept. 16, 1970.

31
from forty-five feet away:
“For Sky Marshals, No Mace or Chemicals, It’s Just Shoot to Kill,”
Tuscaloosa News
, May 16, 1971.

32
first skyjacking czar:
“Nixon Names Gen. Davis to Head Hijacking Fight,”
New York Times
, Sept. 22, 1970.

33
skyjacker before boarding:
“Use of Armed U.S. Guards Expected as FAA Sets Up Task Force on Hijacking,”
New York Times
, Sept. 10, 1970.

34
probably wouldn’t enjoy:
Skyjacking: Hearing Before the Committee on Finance, U.S. Senate, Ninety-First Congress, Second Session, on H.R. 19444
(Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1970), 14–18.

35
drive instead of fly:
Ibid., 24–26.

36
lobbyist meddling:
“Air Tax Proposal Shelved,”
St. Joseph
(Mo.)
News-Press
, Dec. 12, 1970.

37
favor of paying customers:
“Sky Marshal Program Falls Short of Expectations,”
St. Petersburg Independent
, Jan. 21, 1972; “Sky Marshals Force May Be Trimmed,”
Nashua
(N.H.)
Telegraph
, Jun. 17, 1971.

38
his adolescent angst:
“Youth Blames Parents, School for Hijacking,”
Windsor Star
, Mar. 9, 1971.

39
in the Bahamas:
“Hijacker Flies to Bahamas via Miami, New York,”
Palm Beach Post-Times
, May 29, 1971.

40
working on a kibbutz:
“Miner Seized in Hijacking,”
Miami News
, Jun. 5, 1971.

41
death or dismemberment:
“Hijacked Victims Insurance,”
Ocala
(Fla.)
Star-Banner
, Oct. 9, 1970.

42
cared about the war:
The account of the Gregory White hijacking is primarily based on four sources: “More Counts Planned in Skyjacking,”
Lubbock
(Tex.)
Avalanche-Journal
, Jun. 14, 1971; “Jet Hijacker Held Here on $200,000 Bail,”
New York Times
, Jun. 13, 1971; “Passenger Slain in Hijack Effort,”
Star-News
(Wilmington, N.C.), Jun. 13, 1971; and “U.S. Hijacker on Murder Charge,”
Sydney Morning Herald
, Jun. 14, 1971.

43
“who have a ticket?”:
“Puzzling Problem,”
Southeast Missourian
, Jun. 14, 1971.

44
thirty minutes later:
The account of the Richard Obergfell hijacking is primarily based on two sources: “Hijacker Killed by FBI Agent at Kennedy,”
New York Times
, Jul. 24, 1971; and “Slain Hijacker Believed Trying to Fly to Girl,”
Press-Courier
(Oxnard, Calif.), Jul. 25, 1971.

45
“and crews of aircraft”:
“Air Pirate Shot and Killed,”
Spartanburg
(S.C.)
Herald-Journal
, Jul. 24, 1971.

46
but as a fool:
The account of the Paul Joseph Cini hijacking is primarily based on four sources: “Anatomy of a Skyjacker,”
Gazette
(Montreal), Oct. 21, 1978; “Pilot Kayos Hijacker with Fire Ax,”
Telegraph-Herald
(Dubuque, Ia.); “Convicted Hijacker Fighting One-Way Trip to Scotland,”
Vancouver Sun
, Jun. 24, 1982; and “Canada Jet Crew Subdues Hijacker After 6 Hours,”
New York Times
, Nov. 13, 1971.

47
of the Columbia River:
The FBI’s records pertaining to the D. B. Cooper case are archived online at
http://vault.fbi.gov/D-B-Cooper%20
.

48
all the way through:
Parachutist
, the official magazine of the U.S. Parachute Association, ran a detailed three-part series on the Cooper case in its May–July 2010 issues. The series is archived online at
http://parachutistonline.com/category/tags/db-cooper
.

49
“the System”:
“Skyjacker Made into Folk Hero,”
Deseret News
(Salt Lake City, Ut.), Nov. 30, 1971.

50
“blow some minds”:
“Song, T-Shirt Mark $200,000 Hijacking,”
Press-Courier
(Oxnard, Calif.), Jan. 7, 1972.

BOOK: The Skies Belong to Us: Love and Terror in the Golden Age of Hijacking
2.93Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Nemesis by Tim Stevens
The Midnight Rose by Lucinda Riley
The Candidate by Paul Harris
The Alpha's Domination by Sam Crescent
Phantom of the Heart by Stein Willard
Involuntary Witness by Gianrico Carofiglio
Alpha by Jasinda Wilder
Renegade Reborn by J. C. Fiske
The Resurrectionist by Matthew Guinn