![]() | Guest Historian Chris Oakley says, thanks for visiting TIAH. This timeline is based on the idea of D.B. Cooper being a Soviet agent. If you're interested in viewing samples of my other work why not visit the Changing the Times web site. |
| D.B. Cooper |
| November 28 | ![]() |
In 1971, FBI agents made a shocking discovery in the case of would-be hijacker D.B. Cooper: the mysterious 'Raoul' he had been talking to prior to his arrest was a high-ranking station chief with Cuba's DGI intelligence service. This suggested that Cooper might have been part of a Soviet spy ring and the hijacking attempt was actually a cover for a possible defection to the Communist bloc. | |
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December 2
On this day in 1971, suspicions that foiled would-be hijacker D.B. Cooper was a Soviet spy were confirmed when a KGB defector being debriefed at a CIA safe house in France was shown a photo of Cooper and identified him as one Dmitri Kaprinsky, a sleeper agent who'd been working undercover in the United States since the late 1950s. 'D.B. Cooper' was an alias created by the KGB to facilitate Kaprinsky's infiltration into American society. | |
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December 4
On this day in 1971, Dmitri Kaprinsky(a.k.a. D.B. Cooper) was indicted on espionage and attempted hijacking charges in a US federal court in San Francisco. | |
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December 14
In 1971, opening arguments were heard in the espionage and hijacking conspiracy trial of Dmitri Kaprinsky a.k.a. D.B. Cooper.                                                                                   | |
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December 22
On this day in 1971, FBI agents in Los Angeles intercepted a KGB liquidation squad that had been sent to the United States to kill sleeper agent Dmitri Kaprinsky, alias D.B. Cooper. | |
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January 15
In 1972, closing arguments were made in the trial of Dmitri Kaprinsky, alias D.B. Cooper. | |
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January 18
In 1972, Dmitri Kaprinsky, alias D.B. Cooper, was convicted on charges of espionage and conspiracy to commit hijacking. He would later be sentenced to life in prison. | |
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January 22
In 1972, Soviet agent Dmitri Kaprinsky, alias D.B. Cooper, was sentenced to life in prison for espionage and attempted hijacking. | |
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May 22
On this day in 1972, Soviet agent Dmitri Kaprinsky, alias D.B. Cooper, was placed on suicide watch after a prison guard caught him trying to hang himself in his cell. | |
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April 12
In 1985, the body of Dmitri Kaprinsky, alias D.B. Cooper, was turned over to the Soviet embassy in Washington for burial back in Kaprinsky's native Ukraine. | |
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| D.B. Cooper |
April 16
In 1985, KGB agent Dmitri Kaprinsky, alias D.B. Cooper, was posthumously awarded the Order of Lenin for his years of loyal service to the USSR. | |
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April 9
In 1985, thirteen years into his life prison sentence for espionage and attempted hijacking, Dmitri Kaprinsky, alias D.B. Cooper, died of a heart attack in his cell. | |
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| D.B. Cooper |
June 19
In 1994, on this day the chief investigating agent in the Dmitri Kaprinsky/D.B. Cooper case retired from the FBI after thirty years' service with the bureau.                   | |
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November 24
In 1971, would-be hijacker D.B. Cooper was arrested by FBI agents just minutes before he was scheduled to board a Northwest Airlines flight from Portland to Seattle. Pacific Northwest Hijack FoiledEarlier that day, the agency's Portland office had received an anonymous tip about the hijacking plot from a tourist who said he overheard Cooper talking on a payphone to someone identified only as 'Raoul'.
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© Today in Alternate History, 2013-. All characters appearing in this work are fictitious. Any resemblance to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.




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