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Hikers May Have Found Fossett Items

An Anonymous reader writes "CNN is reporting 'A weathered sweat shirt, cash and a pilot license with Fossett's name were found Tuesday near Mammoth Lakes, police Chief Randy Schienle said.' The license did not have a photo. '"We're not certain that it belongs to Steve Fossett, but it certainly has his name on the ID," Schienle said.'"

20 of 219 comments (clear)

  1. Re:It's a hoax, people. by TheMidnight · · Score: 5, Funny

    In other news, a salon discount card with Amelia Earheart's name and picture was found floating in the South Atlantic by a passing schooner.

  2. Re:It's a hoax, people. by tekrat · · Score: 4, Funny

    That's 'cause the ALIENS took 'im.

    And they kept the plane.

    --
    If telephones are outlawed, then only outlaws will have telephones.
  3. Re:Is this a plane? by obidobi · · Score: 5, Informative
  4. Re:It's a hoax, people. by Itsallmyfault · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Nothing in any of the reports I've read said anything about the license being "partially burned"... and the hoaxer had so much money laying around he decided he'd add $1,000 to the find?

  5. Location by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I had some time to burn so I entered a few things in Google Maps. Here's the best map I could come up with using the takeoff location provided by Wikipedia. There's no option for directions by plane, so I went with the walking option. Anyway ... assuming this isn't some stupid hoax, the point is (if there really is one) that the searches last year were all focused on Nevada if I remember correctly. But from the location being reported and from the map, you can see that the location they're talking about is A) in California, and B) pretty much due south from where Fossett took off from.

    1. Re:Location by jd · · Score: 4, Interesting

      As I see it, there are essentially three possibilities. First, Steve's instrumentation failed and he flew not only in the wrong direction but also ended up flying into the lake. Unlikely, given his experience, but even the best sometimes over-rely on instrumentation, and I've spoken to some damn good WW2 pilots who have assured me that prior to reliable instrumentation, people often took a fatal wrong turning in a cloud, or mistook a really smooth river for a runway. All in all, I consider this unlikely but within the realms of possibility.

      The second option is that he crashed somewhere relatively near to where the belongings were found, where "relatively near" would be the distance you could expect a hardened survivor with plenty of experience of extreme conditions to be able to travel given his supplies and the availability of natural resources. In this case, it is possible he deliberately left a marker to (a) avoid walking in circles, and (b) inform searchers he'd survived that long and was in that general proximity. It's not unknown for people to leave such markers, and if there was a reason to believe the crash site would never be found (such as being in a lake), this could well be the only sort of marker he could realistically leave.

      The third option - the most likely but also the most depressing - is that he got clear of the wreckage but was killed by a bear or other large predator, and that what we are seeing is a location where such a predator decided to take a snack. If this is the case, we might still locate the wreck, but this may well be all we'll ever see of Steve Fossett.

      --
      It's a small world and it smells funny; I'd buy another if it wasn't for the money; Take back what I paid (SoM)
  6. Re:It's a hoax, people. by mortonda · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Ok, so a world-renowned pilot takes off in 2,000 pounds of airplane, steel, fuel, and glass, What's found? A partially burned piece of some of the most flammable things on the plane,

    Have you seen the remains of the towers on 9/11? It's bizarre what can come out of a catastrophic event.

    I'm not saying it's genuine or fake, but your criteria doesn't prove anything either.

  7. Re:It's a hoax, people. by Inner_Child · · Score: 5, Funny

    Nonsense! Everyone knows that aliens use video games to determine the worth of a pilot.

    --
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  8. Re:It's a hoax, people. by plasmacutter · · Score: 4, Funny

    Ok, so a world-renowned pilot takes off in 2,000 pounds of airplane, steel, fuel, and glass, What's found? A partially burned piece of some of the most flammable things on the plane,

    Have you seen the remains of the towers on 9/11? It's bizarre what can come out of a catastrophic event.

    I'm not saying it's genuine or fake, but your criteria doesn't prove anything either.

    Stewart: "how do you know the twin towers collapsed there?"
    Joe: "Well, I found a little plastic card and some chewing gum"
    Stewart: "noo.. concrete chunks? no steel fragments?"
    Joe: "nope"
    Stewart: "with all due respect sir, this structure was several hundred meters tall"
    Joe: "It's bizarre what survives a catastrophic event.

    --
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  9. Re:It's a hoax, people. by flyingsquid · · Score: 5, Informative
    The CNN article misses some important details. According to the AP:

    The information on the pilot license -- including Fossett's name, address, date of birth and certificate number -- was sent in a photograph to the Federal Aviation Administration, and all matched the agency's records, spokesman Ian Gregor said.

    "We're trying to determine the authenticity of the document," Gregor said.

    The hiker, Preston Morrow, said he found an FAA identity card, a pilot's license, a third ID and $1,005 in cash tangled in a bush off a trail just west of the town of Mammoth Lakes on Monday. He said he turned the items over to local police Wednesday after unsuccessful attempts to contact Fossett's family.

    So our hoaxer forges 3 separate IDs, in one case getting all the original information that was on Fossett's FAA card, and adds $1005? That's one heck of a hoax. I suppose you could argue that's he's trying to get a reward from Fossett's rich widow for "finding" her husband's final resting place... but after he couldn't get ahold of the family's lawyers, he went to the police. Seems that would be the last thing a hoaxer would want to do, is get the police and authorities involved; I imagine forging federal IDs is a pretty serious offense. Doesn't make sense.

    True, finding the contents of his wallet off on their own is odd... but animals are curious and like to chew on things, especially when they're hungry. In the middle of winter in the Sierra mountains, a bear or fox might decide that a leather wallet was better to eat than nothing and tear the wallet apart for a snack. Bears in particular will eat damn near anything, edible or not.

  10. Re:A prank? by Cowclops · · Score: 4, Informative

    The other card and money are paper. Pilots licenses are made out of plastic. It wouldn't get wrinkled/dirty like a piece of paper.

  11. Re:It's a hoax, people. by vux984 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    One little flaw, they may be highly flammable but they are also highly transportable. If the plane EXPLODED, and if the hikers were where it exploded, sure.

    1) depending on the environment the hikers could have walked within 50 yards from the crash site and not seen it.

    2) even if he didn't survive, or died away from the crash site, animals could have wandered off with stuff either from the crash site, or from the site where he passed away.

    As someone else said a bear might easily be interested in taking a bite out of a leather wallet, or briefcase. It might also rip through a bag cotaining perhaps a sweater, and then strew its contents of anything it wasn't interested in along it path. Contents which might be moved further by weather or other animals...

  12. Re:It's a hoax, people. by myth_of_sisyphus · · Score: 4, Interesting

    People in the later stages of hypothermia engage in 'shedding' of clothes. They think they are hot so they start taking off articles of clothing, leaving a trail. This is often how rescuers find bodies, by following the trail of clothing to a frozen stiff. This was how they found the husband of the James Kim family who made a wrong turn in California about a year ago. The family stayed in the car while the husband went on walkabout. They followed the trail of clothing to his frozen corpse.

  13. Good Samaritan takes stuff by Walkingshark · · Score: 4, Funny

    15 minutes later old man comes out of lake after a refreshing swim and says, "Hey, who the fuck took my wallet and my shirt!?"

    --
    The world you experience is only a close approximation of reality.
  14. Go talk to the Perlan Project guys. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    They'll tell you that Fossett was anything but "an amazing pilot". He wasn't exactly a terrible pilot, just nothing better than average, at best. What he did have was a willingness to fund adventures, so long as he was top dog.

    His money was greatly appreciated, but the attention-seeking man was merely tolerated. He wasn't hated, but nor was he required, beyond the financial aspect of his participation. But Fossett loved the glory and limelight, so he made it a precondition of funding a venture that he be the public face of it.

    Yes, I know this is going to be modded troll and flamebait, but at least I can say that I genuinely "knew" Fossett, and I don't like hearing people such as the OP claiming that Fossett was "an amazing pilot", when the fact is he couldn't have done shit without the help of the other people and pilots he funded.

  15. Re:It's a hoax, people. by Macman408 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    No, it's not. The certificate has a small tear taken out of it. The other IDs didn't look to have fared quite as well, but also don't show any obvious burn marks - they're torn, tattered, and dirty. A year of exposure to the elements probably caused all the damage you see to those papers and the bills.

    More plausible: He was able to get the plane on the ground, probably destroyed it in the process, suffered significant injuries, and was unable to get help. He may have left some items behind, dropped them, or perhaps his body was disturbed by wildlife. I expect they'll find more evidence upon searching more thoroughly.

  16. Real breaking news by kaos07 · · Score: 4, Informative

    Search crews have found some wreckage, apparently. No link because it's only a banner on CNN's website.

  17. Re:Some genuine news here. by jd · · Score: 4, Informative

    Just in: Wreckage has been reported near to where the items were found, but the exact location is being kept a closely-guarded secret. They're due to swarm into the area of the reported wreckage pretty much first thing tomorrow.

    --
    It's a small world and it smells funny; I'd buy another if it wasn't for the money; Take back what I paid (SoM)
  18. Re:It's a hoax, people. by evilviper · · Score: 4, Insightful

    What's found? A partially burned piece of some of the most flammable things on the plane, including a very small piece of PLASTIC that happens to have his name on it.

    Nobody said anything about the findings being burned, partially or otherwise.

    But no body, no 1,000 pounds of steel,

    Large, bulky items tend to stay right where they were put... Smaller and lighter items get picked up by winds, water (streams, rivers, etc.), etc.

    just a few, highly flammable personal items (clothing, ID)

    Yes, because the real world is just like the movies... where every crash causes an explosion and a raging inferno, even when the vehicle has run out of gas.

    Which is why there are no undiscovered crash sites, since someone always notices the raging inferno... And of course you don't actually find a downed plane, because noting remains after the necessary conflagration...

    This is a hoax.

    You are a moron.

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  19. Re:It's a hoax, people. by djupedal · · Score: 4, Informative

    >They've already found wreckage [bloomberg.com], so this is basically a sure thing

    Having actually searched for, and found, missing persons and aircraft wreckage on the ground in that general location in the Sierras, I can tell you that there are many more undiscovered crash sites than you might believe. The odds are good that it could be any of dozens of aircraft that have gone missing in recent years, including the one that carried Fossett, but not good enough to be a 'sure thing'. This is why they have to go in and make sure.