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sgbofav
Registered: 09/05/07
Posts: 39

    10/26/09 at 01:01 PM
#1

http://dsc.discovery.com/news/2009/10/23/amelia-earhart.html

djordan
Registered: 12/09/06
Posts: 197

    10/26/09 at 03:57 PM
#2

The interesting thing about this, for those of use who have been researching the Earhart mystery for 40 years, is that despite the claims, there has not been one shread of evidence found on that island than can be traced to Earhart, or her Electra.  There was a survey party from New Zealand on that island within a very short time after the disappearance, they camped for months on the very spot where she was supposed to have crashed.  And not one person mentioned finding any airplane wreckage or anything at all related to Earhart.  Search aircraft flew over the same spot within a week of the disappearance and saw no wreckage.  The island was then inhabited from 1939 until sometime in the 1960s.  No Electra wreckage was reported to have been found during that time.

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"Aircraft Wrecks In The Mountains And Deserts Of California"
http://www.donrjordan.com
Warbirder
Registered: 05/12/07
Posts: 87

    10/26/09 at 04:44 PM
#3

There are times when people amaze me. Two incidents from recent history make me wonder what it is about people that causes them to latch on to the barest information and chew on it like a dog on a bone that gets bigger the more it is knawed on. The loss of Flight 19 is one, Amelia Earhart's disappearance is the other. Face it; Earhart and Noonan flew off into the sunset and were never seen again. Flight 19 flew off into the sunset and were never seen again. Any info beyond that is pure speculation. The answer to the location of both incidents is still about 20-years away. When satellite technology can strip away the oceans as if there was no water between their instruments and the ocean floor, and computers are powerful enough to pick out the smallest suspect object and make sense of it, then we will have answers to questions going back to the Phonecians. Bob 


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djordan
Registered: 12/09/06
Posts: 197

    10/26/09 at 06:06 PM
#4

Right you are Warbirder.  And I can't wait until that time.
Don


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"Aircraft Wrecks In The Mountains And Deserts Of California"
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Dennis
Registered: 12/01/06
Posts: 530

    10/26/09 at 06:17 PM
#5

I just finished responding to someone else who had forwarded that to me.  If there is (was) a chance that Amelia Earhart ended up on that island, they (and I mean a bunch of them) should go over the whole island with a fine tooth comb.  I am at best skeptical.  Dennis

djordan
Registered: 12/09/06
Posts: 197

    10/26/09 at 09:27 PM
#6

You see, that's where I'm coming from.  They have gone over that island with a fine tooth comb.  At least on the surface.  I need hard evidence.  I need a piece of that airplane. There were people on that island pretty much continuously since 4 months after she disappeared.  Gobs of people living on and exploring that island until the mid 1960s.  Since we really don't know what happened, it is possible she did land there.  But I too am skeptical.  I would like to know the truth in my lifetime.  I hope like Hell they really find something this time, so that we could put an end to all this debate.

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"Aircraft Wrecks In The Mountains And Deserts Of California"
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NVWarbirds
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Registered: 03/28/07
Posts: 174

    10/31/09 at 12:40 PM
#7

Interesting article from the Carson City Nevada Appeal:

Cousin: Japanese captured Amelia Earhart


Wally Earhart of Carson City, the fourth cousin of Amelia Earhart, says the U.S. government continues to perpetrate a “massive coverup” about her mysterious disappearance in the Pacific 72 years ago.

Because of the current surge in interest about the pilot's fate spurred by the recent release of the film “Amelia,” starring Richard Gere and Hilary Swank, it is time the American public “know the truth about Amelia's last days,” said Earhart, who will portray Abraham Lincoln as grand marshal of the Nevada Day parade today.

Amelia and her navigator, Fred Noonan, did not die as claimed by the government and the Navy when their twin-engine Electra plunged into the Pacific on July 2, 1937, Wally Earhart said in an interview.

“They died while in Japanese captivity on the island of Saipan in the Northern Marianas,” claims Earhart, a 38-year Carson City resident who often portrays Lincoln and other historical figures at appearances sponsored by groups such as the Nevada Historical Society.

“The Navy and the federal government would have you believe that Amelia and Noonan died on impact when their plane ran out of gas while attempting to reach Howland Island during their flight around the world,” Earhart said.

“Their airplane did crash into the Pacific, but instead of dying, the pair was rescued by a nearby Japanese fishing trawler. The Electra airplane was still floating and the Japanese hauled it aboard their ship in a large net.

“The Japanese then transported Amelia Earhart, Noonan and the airplane to Saipan. Noonan was beheaded by the Japanese and Amelia soon died from dysentery and other ailments,” Wally Earhart continued. He added that the Japanese troops on the island cut the airplane into scrap and tossed the remnants into the Pacific.

“There are many people, including Japanese military and Saipan natives, who witnessed all these events on the island,” said Earhart, who disputes claims by several historical researchers that Amelia Earhart and Noonan were instantly killed when their plane hit the water or they died of starvation and disease on either Howland Island, Gardner Island or in the Marshall Islands.

 
Why do the government and Navy continue to “cover up” the true facts of the case?

There are two major theories, according to Wally Earhart.

One is that the Navy was “inept” in not finding and rescuing the aviators after their aircraft crashed. The other is that President Franklin D. Roosevelt “wanted the whole matter kept under wraps,” Earhart said.

“Roosevelt had asked Earhart, a close family friend, to scout Japanese military installations in the Pacific during her flights in the region. This was kept a deep secret back in 1937 and it is being kept a secret today because Japan and the United States are good friends and military allies and the government doesn't want to drudge up old antagonisms,” Wally Earhart believes.

Earhart also noted that Amelia Earhart had close relations with Nevada.

“She loved Northern Nevada and often visited friends in Carson City and at Lake Tahoe. And she also made several flights across the state, stopping at a half-dozen cities,” Earhart added.

On one flight, while flying a small plane between Las Vegas and Salt Lake City in 1928, she was declared missing after making a forced landing in bad weather in a deserted area near the Nevada-Utah state line. Rescuers were called out when it was feared she had crashed into a mountain peak in isolated Lincoln County in eastern Nevada.

Searchers ultimately found Amelia sitting beside her downed plane. She was uninjured but the craft suffered a bent propeller and other minor damages.

In 1931, Earhart crossed Nevada in an autogiro, the forerunner of the helicopter, making landings at Wendover, Elko, Battle Mountain, Lovelock and Reno.

And in 1929, George Putnam, her future husband and millionaire heir to a publishing fortune, divorced his first wife, Dorothy, in Reno. Amelia Earhart and Putnam were married two years later.

The mystery surrounding the fate of Amelia Earhart may never be solved. It remains the most famous missing person case in United States history.

• David C. Henley is publisher emeritus of the Lahontan Valley News.



Warbirder
Registered: 05/12/07
Posts: 87

    10/31/09 at 04:07 PM
#8

Dunno, Wally. You have shifted the center of interest 2,500 miles closer to Japan. Next stop, Tokyo, where they were beheaded by the first female executioner in Japan, Madam Flutterby. By the way, Wally what do you think about the government's cover up of the 9/11 plot?


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Dennis
Registered: 12/01/06
Posts: 530

    10/31/09 at 06:02 PM
#9

In 1972 I read the book "Search for Amelia Earhart". (I don't remember who the author was)  The book focused on those same facts with the exception of the plane being "netted" - yeah, right.
  That story is full of hooey.  Why would the Japanese recover the plane only to cut it up and try to hide it?  The book had stories of a woman pilot that had been held in prison, and stories about Noonan being beheaded, bt no stories about a plane being hauled in in a net.
  I don't recall seeing an Electra in Close Encounters either.  Dennis
djordan
Registered: 12/09/06
Posts: 197

    10/31/09 at 07:20 PM
#10

Oh lord!  "The Search For Amelia Earhart" was written by Fred Goerner, a San Francisco newsman.  It was a great read at the time. Still is for that matter, as long as you can keep fact from fiction.  I've been a student of the Earhart mystery since the late 1950s…yeah I'm old!  So far the best book that I've read on the subject  is Cam Warren's "Amelia Earhart's Flight Into Yesterday".

Don J.


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"Aircraft Wrecks In The Mountains And Deserts Of California"
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