Top 10 Dark Amelia Earhart Discoveries That Prove She Never Really Vanished

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MostAmazingTop10

Күн бұрын

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@seachel.dunk1
@seachel.dunk1 9 ай бұрын
I hope she either survived and was rescued and decided not to come back, or that she died on impact so she didn’t suffer. But I can see how some of these theory’s could work. Here is my question though…. They keep finding wreckage sites, planes in different places. If it’s not Amelia, it’s still a plane that somebody flew. So who’s is it? Who crashed? Why didn’t we hear about that? These questions need answers before I’ll be satisfied.
@vuho2075
@vuho2075 9 ай бұрын
She was married to a filthy rich guy. I'm sure she would come back if she could. What other planes? There haven't been anything. TIGHAR never found a plane on their "the crabs ate her" island. Bob Ballard never found anything. The Japanese captured her? No plane, no grave, no nothing there as well. This is the first time anyone saw anything.
@LilFivio
@LilFivio 9 ай бұрын
I believe a theory I heard a few years ago, someone in the crash area picked up a signal . But no one managed to hear her/save her in time then her and the navigator got eaten by the flesh eating crabs.
@vuho2075
@vuho2075 9 ай бұрын
@@LilFivio Yeah, that's the TIGHAR theory. Problem is the US Navy heard the same messages and they were all dismissed out of hand
@LilFivio
@LilFivio 9 ай бұрын
@@vuho2075 I mean it´s so long ago, what if some slipped through?
@vuho2075
@vuho2075 9 ай бұрын
@@LilFivio There are lots of "what if" when it comes to this thing. I don't have anything against the "castaway eaten by crabs" theory. It just bugs me that some folks (TIGHAR) treat it as having rock solid proof, when we only got "maybe" radio messages, "maybe" a missing skeleton, "maybe" a jar of face cream + sextant, etc...
@markvicferrer
@markvicferrer 9 ай бұрын
All those accounts of her living a new life after the crash; she loved to fly. Unless she suffered injuries preventing her from flying, she would have flown. There weren't many female pilots, so she'd draw immediate attention to herself if she flew again in her new life.
@Hartleymolly
@Hartleymolly 9 ай бұрын
I don’t think there was ANY female pilots, she was the first..
@RobertLack
@RobertLack 7 ай бұрын
Irene Bolam, who they mention, lived in New Jersey and was active in a women's pilot association and had many of the same friends as Amelia did, include Amelia's sister. Go figure. She was in her 70s when the book came out claiming it was Amelia. She may have enjoyed flying on her own up until then, just out of the spotlight as a "New Jersey Housewife." They have done facial comparison and handwriting analysis and they are spot on identical. Same missing upper right side tooth, gap between front teeth, same measurements of facial features, etc. Check it out the website. Google Amelia Earhart/Irene Bolam comparisons. Interesting reading. The 2017 photo is of her and Fed Noonan. The islanders have been saying since after WWII EXACTLY what is in the photo. EXACTLY. Long before the photo appeared. Amelia and Fred on the Dock on Jaluit, the Koshu towing a barge with Amelia's plane on the barge. Exactly what is in the photo.
@stephennewton5697
@stephennewton5697 9 ай бұрын
A very interesting and informative video about the possibility about Amelia Earhart.
@sarahreid6360
@sarahreid6360 9 ай бұрын
This is incredible that they’ve hopefully found her plane
@bobmarshall3700
@bobmarshall3700 4 ай бұрын
BS and nonsense!
@11ccom
@11ccom 9 ай бұрын
1: Earhart and Noonan did not know Mores Code (could not understand the transmissions from the Itasca). 2: Earhart took of the "radio directional antenna" (could not hear the direction of the Mores Code). 3: Noonan miscalculated location from being on the south side of the equator. 4: No water on Gardner Island (Nikumaroro) to survive. 5: Noonan may have been kill by sharks on Gardner.
@sevenswordsin
@sevenswordsin 9 ай бұрын
Hopefully they found her plane and some closure 😢
@aceroleplays3047
@aceroleplays3047 8 ай бұрын
No, sadly they say that the plane that found was it but it obviously ant is a WW1-2 P36 US Fighter
@sevenswordsin
@sevenswordsin 8 ай бұрын
@@aceroleplays3047 oh that's awful 😞
@aceroleplays3047
@aceroleplays3047 8 ай бұрын
@@sevenswordsin yeah
@sevenswordsin
@sevenswordsin 8 ай бұрын
@@aceroleplays3047 that's good
@joebombero1
@joebombero1 8 ай бұрын
It looks like a real possibility. My initial thought was a Japanese bomber, but there is a little hole toward the tail that may be a window. It is possible. Have to wait.
@mikememine1423
@mikememine1423 9 ай бұрын
Interesting video... thanks James and Crew, topical and well done too
@joenania
@joenania 7 ай бұрын
I would say that Amelia Earhart and her co pilot Fred Noonan watched their plane be taken away to sea by the tide - BUT before that time they sent out many , many signals - - and stayed on the island for some time possibly a few months ? - - - - that time being too long to survive - - BECAUSE at that time in history there was not enough technology to rescue them or even be able to get to that island safely enough to have saved them - - In fact the rescue teams were possibly looking in the wrong area(s) and by the time they could have arrived to save them the plane had sunk and Amelia and Fred were dead from exhaustion !
@jeffbeatty8595
@jeffbeatty8595 9 ай бұрын
Why are you playing that annoying music in the background? Little spooky music. They don't give it to it evidence
@clarkgable2733
@clarkgable2733 9 ай бұрын
There was a story on TV of two Marines who were told to dig up a grave and that the grave contained the bodies of Fred Noonan and Amelia 'Earhart and that they were executed by the Japanese.
@bobmarshall3700
@bobmarshall3700 4 ай бұрын
Rubbish!
@clarkgable2733
@clarkgable2733 4 ай бұрын
@@bobmarshall3700 It was on the history channel.
@AaronWilcher-e9y
@AaronWilcher-e9y 9 ай бұрын
She certainly did not survive whatever happened to her aircraft or the ocean . It's also absolutely absurd to think she planned that . She was living her dream doing what was going to make history. Hope the research teams find her plane .
@Luis24208
@Luis24208 9 ай бұрын
Or her remains could be inside that same sonar pic wreck but further investigation needs to be done
@ferraritoybox
@ferraritoybox 9 ай бұрын
Loose the music, please thx
@DavidBrady-m6c
@DavidBrady-m6c 9 ай бұрын
Hi james nice vid🙂
@TheEnigman
@TheEnigman 8 ай бұрын
TLDR: Ditched in sea, died of exposure. That alleged photo of Earhart and Noonan was apparently taken 2 years before she disappeared. Radio operators from the Coast Guard cutter that she was supposed to contact reported that they could hear her, that she reported her fuel situation but that she could not apparently hear them. It would have been highly unlikely for her to be attempting to spy on the Japanese given her fuel situation where every available space had been allocated for fuel and the location of Japanese possessions at the time. The range of the Lockheed Electra would not have allowed for flyovers near the Japanese islands AND make it to Howland even with all the extra fuel they were carrying. Even with the tensions between America and Japan, the Japanese assisted in searching for Earhart and it would have been quite the coup for their public relations had they found and rescued her. Japan was not ready for conflict with America at that time, something that bringing down Earhart would have potentially triggered. The radio transmissions reported by civilians did not correlate with any the Coast Guard and Navy reported and they would have been in a much better position to hear them. Some of the reported radio transmissions were from people who were way out of range for the Electra's radio to have reached and the batteries would have run out without fuel to power the engines to keep them charged. The most likely scenario is that they ditched in the ocean and may have got out of the plane but perished in the ocean. With decomposition in the water, limbs and the head come away from the trunk so it's likely that some of their body parts may have eventually washed up on Gardner Island (Nikumaroro) and those remains were what were possibly found in 1939.
@anitajinfla9762
@anitajinfla9762 9 ай бұрын
Im sorry but that background noise of weird grinding or buzz ...is annoying. Great video otherwise but I had to use closed captioning...🙄 sound off Would be interesting though if recent sonar is correct on it being a plane possibly in the ocean. Not a boat/ship.....and if any remains are on board as morbid as it sounds. Would put an end to the conspiracies about her. I myself thought maybe she was harassed and they ended up dismantling her plane, scaping it and she lived, like you say in a witness protection program. But then...who knows..
@horse_gamer1212
@horse_gamer1212 9 ай бұрын
Yea the sound was so annoying
@jennicaharris9134
@jennicaharris9134 9 ай бұрын
I found the sound annoying, too.
@Me2Lancer
@Me2Lancer 7 ай бұрын
Thanks for your post about the fate of Amelia Earhart. In 1964 my ship, USS Brister DER-327 was cruising out of Guam on our way to Koror Palau, Western Caroline Islands. One afternoon we received a radio call from a woman claiming to be attempting to recreate Amelia Earhart's flight. We were about half-way between Guam and Koror at the time.
@ricktaylor3748
@ricktaylor3748 9 ай бұрын
Oceangate is taking reservations to dive to Amelia's plane with their older carbon fiber submersible.
@LilFivio
@LilFivio 9 ай бұрын
not again
@lyndseymarieburke1834
@lyndseymarieburke1834 9 ай бұрын
Right! 🤨
@LizLaws-v6p
@LizLaws-v6p 9 ай бұрын
The photo was printed in a magazine about three years before her flight ✈️.
@WascallyWabbitt
@WascallyWabbitt 9 ай бұрын
I'm surprised he didn't mention that.
@hollywoodjoe123
@hollywoodjoe123 9 ай бұрын
What magazine was it ?
@WascallyWabbitt
@WascallyWabbitt 9 ай бұрын
@@hollywoodjoe123 A 1935 Japanese coffee table travel book titled “Naval life line; the view of our South Pacific: Photo album of Southern Pacific Islands.”
@LizLaws-v6p
@LizLaws-v6p 9 ай бұрын
@@hollywoodjoe123 something from Japan or China I think.
@RobertLack
@RobertLack 7 ай бұрын
The Marshall Island Government released a letter saying that the dock they are standing on was built in 1936 so how can the book have a photo of them from 1935? A coffee table book. Only one, with the pages easily inserted. Not a bound book. Again only 1 in existence. Only proof that it is from 1935 is an ink stamp in the back of the book. Could easily have been added by the Japanese so they don't have to answer for what they possibly did to Amelia.
@noelhernandez363
@noelhernandez363 9 ай бұрын
I saw Elvis and M.J. last week hanging out at my local pub!! 🍺🍺
@hollywoodjoe123
@hollywoodjoe123 9 ай бұрын
At 7:05 into this video the narrator makes mention of a Japanese ship " towing a barge thats a similar length to Earhart's plane " Does anyone see what he is referring to ? What ship is he talking about ? There are a few ships in the photo !
@ericwelsh4853
@ericwelsh4853 5 ай бұрын
It doesn't matter. That photo has been debunked. It's been proven that the photo was taken before Earhart crashed.
@Southern-author
@Southern-author 9 ай бұрын
A possible scenario is that the plane was supposed to be lost and Amelia would be picked up by the U.S, Navy. As a result of her crash, there was the largest air and sea search in history. The Navy was able to chart all of the islands in an extremely large area. Reportedly, those charts came in very handy in the WWII Pacific Theater. Without Amelia's 'crash', the U.S. would never have been allowed to explore that Japanese controlled part of the ocean. Amelia was serving her country and something went wrong.
@lyndseymarieburke1834
@lyndseymarieburke1834 9 ай бұрын
This is very misleading! Prove the facts before you tell the story.
@rogerwhite3644
@rogerwhite3644 9 ай бұрын
If she ditched, There's a very very small chance she and her navigator survived. Maybe they floated a bit. Or not. But survival would be dubious at best
@Zuleika_1
@Zuleika_1 9 ай бұрын
Well only know when they get the plane out and see if she died in plane or plane shot down etc
@hollywoodjoe123
@hollywoodjoe123 9 ай бұрын
Yes right - and are her bones in the plane - ?
@TheCommenterDragon
@TheCommenterDragon 9 ай бұрын
As much as I'd like to believe that they finally found Amelia's plane, The fact that they haven't been able to go on a submarine expedition to explore it yet only proves to me that they don't know for sure what that sonar image really is. I mean it could be a airplane or it could entirely something else that just resembles the shape of an airplane. But either way, Until they actually do a deep sea expedition to check it out, I will remain unconvinced.
@austinlucas1982
@austinlucas1982 Ай бұрын
Its 16,400 feet down... The Titanic is 12,500 ft below the ocean. Back in July they were supposed to have sent in equipment to go to that depth. I've seen reports that they are almost 90% sure it's her plane.
@horse_gamer1212
@horse_gamer1212 9 ай бұрын
The music is so annoying in the background
@TIMB1044
@TIMB1044 9 ай бұрын
That Photo was on the History channel and was proven to be false.
@dionnacl
@dionnacl 9 ай бұрын
What about Noonan? Don’t forget he died too
@jimdavison4077
@jimdavison4077 9 ай бұрын
None of these theories have any bases in reality. In 1937 the US and Japan had no hostility towards each other.
@pembrokelove
@pembrokelove 8 ай бұрын
The capture theory, while likely incorrect, links to the identity of Tokyo Rose. 🤷‍♀️ that’s pretty interesting at least.
@hollywoodjoe123
@hollywoodjoe123 9 ай бұрын
Did anybody think of what I am thinking ? With all the deep sea submarines in the last 87 years are you going to tell me that they have not ever went down there in that area ? And with the technology to land on the moon and orbit in outer space being around for decades why no exploring the depths of the ocean with submarines that can go that deep ?
@buhbuhjaychampagne1706
@buhbuhjaychampagne1706 4 ай бұрын
It’s the pressure from being too deep in water. The deeper they go, the more the submersible will squeeze together.
@Michael-uu9nv
@Michael-uu9nv 9 ай бұрын
Watch unsolved mysteries season 3 they spoke to a witness who said she was shot dead and buried
@victoriathorne8252
@victoriathorne8252 9 ай бұрын
I’m a big fan of Amelia Earhart
@rkmklz7562
@rkmklz7562 9 ай бұрын
The Plane was destroyed in Saipan in 1944...by US Marines 😮.... They were fewn back to the United States...and given assume names
@dan6442
@dan6442 9 ай бұрын
Most logical ending was that she went down with the plane.
@christoperbrandon1311
@christoperbrandon1311 9 ай бұрын
what's the update on the plain?
@suzannehaynes824
@suzannehaynes824 9 ай бұрын
Knew a lady that looked like her.
@hollywoodjoe123
@hollywoodjoe123 9 ай бұрын
hello from Hollywood Joe -
@rkmklz7562
@rkmklz7562 9 ай бұрын
She did not die in the South Pacific....She was taken back to Saipan.....her and Fred Nooman were given asume name...they both have seen in Nebraska and Ohio...they were Spying on the Japanese in 1937...it would a fake crash...they were takes into Military Custody...and flew back to the United States ...in 1944 the Plane was destroyed in Saipan ....my father was there he was in the Marines...in WW2.....😮
@user-rx7dc7qn9v
@user-rx7dc7qn9v 9 ай бұрын
Tupac was on the Jenny jones show in the audience after his death and that's why they shut down the show and that's a fact 💯 they didn't want the world to know the truth
@aiai-cb6cq
@aiai-cb6cq 9 ай бұрын
6:35 We already know that this photo was taken in 1935, two years before she went missing. In other words, the person in this photo is not Amelia Earhart.
@RobertLack
@RobertLack 7 ай бұрын
The Marshall Island Government released a letter saying that the dock they are standing on was built in 1936 so how can the book have a photo of them from 1935? A coffee table book. Only one, with the pages easily inserted. Not a bound book. Again only 1 in existence. Only proof that it is from 1935 is an ink stamp in the back of the book. Could easily have been added by the Japanese so they don't have to answer for what they possibly did to Amelia.
@aiai-cb6cq
@aiai-cb6cq 7 ай бұрын
Is that proven by official documents from the 1930s? I previously read the letter issued by the Marshall Islands, but I don't think it provided any concrete evidence that the dock did not exist in 1935. They simply said in the letter that there was no dock in 1935. I think their only basis was the testimony of an old man on the island that ``there was no dock in 1935.'' They are issuing commemorative stamps of Amelia. Therefore, it would probably be more convenient for them to assume that Amelia had crash-landed in the Marshall Islands. Even if the current dock did not exist in 1935, the Marshall Islands was the center of Japan's South Sea trade at that time. Therefore, there is no doubt that there was some sort of well-developed port facility there at the time. This photo was probably taken in such a place. The National Library of Japan has proven that the photo was taken at least in 1935 or earlier.
@blackpanther696936
@blackpanther696936 9 ай бұрын
It would have been better without the music
@jeffjeff4477
@jeffjeff4477 5 ай бұрын
I think its a WW2 plane Gardner Island was a high possibility, due to a number of items found relating to A^H and Navigator Seems likely
@haileybrewington
@haileybrewington 9 ай бұрын
Oooo the shoutout at the end saying the town of Mt Shasta I lived an hour from that we normally went up to Mt Shasta to go play in snow and now where I live I got all the snow I need
@mikeglossip7598
@mikeglossip7598 3 ай бұрын
what's HARDER to find than a needle in a haystack.....
@bradgammell
@bradgammell 9 ай бұрын
That photo was proven to not see them. I could be mistaken, but it was shown to be from a book that was published before their crash.
@RobertLack
@RobertLack 7 ай бұрын
The Marshall Island Government released a letter saying that the dock they are standing on was built in 1936 so how can the book have a photo of them from 1935? A coffee table book. Only one, with the pages easily inserted. Not a bound book. Again only 1 in existence. Only proof that it is from 1935 is an ink stamp in the back of the book. Could easily have been added by the Japanese so they don't have to answer for what they possibly did to Amelia.
@Texanfox97
@Texanfox97 9 ай бұрын
First😍 excited for this video 😳
@davescott9409
@davescott9409 9 ай бұрын
I wouldn't get my hopes up about recent sonar findings of an airplane in the Pacific. The Pacific ocean is littered with airplanes from WW2.
@davekinghorn9567
@davekinghorn9567 9 ай бұрын
Swept wings. Its Malaysia Flight 370.
@rayphillips6060
@rayphillips6060 8 ай бұрын
It's also said she got re married on the day she's supposed to have died July 2nd 1937
@JimmyGodwin-cg6bc
@JimmyGodwin-cg6bc 5 ай бұрын
Itll never be over for some people
@rcclassiccrawlers4368
@rcclassiccrawlers4368 9 ай бұрын
Yeah, it finally happened!……Maybe
@haydenknowlton22
@haydenknowlton22 9 ай бұрын
They found her plane but where is her body
@hollywoodjoe123
@hollywoodjoe123 9 ай бұрын
Her bones are in the plane that went down deep into the ocean -
@mk_82
@mk_82 5 ай бұрын
Not to discourage people from speaking there thoughts but Amelia most likely would not be alive here in 2025 she was born 1897 she’d be 127 this year that’s older than the oldest person
@johnhennery8820
@johnhennery8820 5 ай бұрын
The thought that she mite have died from lack of water being no fresh water on the iland
@guitarhole
@guitarhole 9 ай бұрын
Be sure to watch this at 2.0 speed.
@shaunault7538
@shaunault7538 9 ай бұрын
Its not fake news
@thomascleveland9924
@thomascleveland9924 7 ай бұрын
has anyone considered that the image not only resembles an Electra but also is an uncanny resembles a Warthog?? check it out
@eddiecharles6457
@eddiecharles6457 8 ай бұрын
I saw Elvis yesterday.
@richardpierce342
@richardpierce342 9 ай бұрын
This picture has a swept back wing look, like the F86 jet. Until it's explored and photographed I disagree with this finding. Let her rest in peace...
@oysterace
@oysterace 7 ай бұрын
she ran off with her drunken boyfriend, they put the plane on auto pilot and watched it fly away and crash in the ocean. then they lived there lives out in seclusion. its not hard to figure out.
@antdavisonNZ
@antdavisonNZ 8 ай бұрын
watch, or at least read the plot line of, the 1943 film "Flight for Freedom", she was recruited to spy on military installations illegally built on Japanese League of Nations mandated Pacific Islands, as they were not well charted at the time, no doubt her plane was intercepted, recovered and she was interned until dying during the duration, her plane was found and destroyed by US forces in 1944 on the island of Saipan
@antdavisonNZ
@antdavisonNZ 8 ай бұрын
When it comes to Earhart and Noonan on Saipan, we have another, entirely separate classification of witnesses and eyewitnesses: the American GIs who were on Saipan in the summer of 1944. The Battle of Saipan, fought from June 15 to July 9, 1944, was the most important battle of the Pacific War to date. The U.S. 2nd and 4th Marine Divisions, and the Army's 27th Infantry Division, commanded by Lt. Gen. Holland Smith, defeated the 43rd Infantry Division of the Imperial Japanese Army, commanded by Lt. Gen. Yoshitsugu Saito. The loss of Saipan, with the death of at least 29,000 Japanese troops and heavy civilian casualties, precipitated the resignation of Japanese Prime Minister Hideki Tojo and left the Japanese mainland within the range of Allied B-29 bombers. Saipan would become the launching point for retaking other islands in the Mariana chain, and the eventual invasion of the Philippines, in October 1944. The victory at Saipan was also important for quite another reason, one you will not see in any of the official histories. At an unknown date soon after coming ashore on D-Day, June 15, American forces discovered Amelia Earhart’s Electra 10E, NR 16020, in a Japanese hangar at As Lito Field, the Japanese airstrip on Saipan. Thomas E. Devine, author of the 1987 classic, “Eyewitness: The Amelia Earhart Incident,” was a sergeant in the Army’s 244th Postal Unit, and came ashore at Saipan on July 6, just a few days before the island was declared secure. Devine was ordered to drive his commanding officer, Lt. Fritz Liebig, to As Lito Field, and there he was soon informed that Amelia Earhart’s airplane had been discovered, relatively intact. Devine later claimed he saw the Electra three times soon thereafter - in flight, on the ground when he inspected it at the off- limits airfield, and later that night in flames. During that period, Marine Pvt. Robert E. Wallack found Amelia’s briefcase in a blown safe in a Japanese administration building on Saipan. “We entered what may have been a Japanese government building, picking up souvenirs strewn about,” Wallack wrote in a notarized statement. “Under the rubble was a locked safe. One of our group was a demolition man who promptly applied some gel to blow it open. We thought at the time, that we would all become Japanese millionaires. After the smoke cleared I grabbed a brown leather attaché case with a large handle and flip lock.” The contents were official-looking papers, all concerning Amelia Earhart: maps, permits and reports apparently pertaining to her around-the world flight. “I wanted to retain this as a souvenir,” Wallack continued, “but my Marine buddies insisted that it may be important and should be turned in. I went down to the beach where I encountered a naval officer and told of my discovery. He gave me a receipt for the material, and stated that it would be returned to me if it were not important. I have never seen the material since.” Other soldiers saw or knew of the discovery of Amelia Earhart’s plane, including Earskin J. Nabers, of Baldwyn, Mississippi, a 20-year old private who worked in the secret radio message section of the 8th Marine Regiment’s H&S Communication Platoon. On or about July 6, Nabers received and decoded three messages about the Electra - one announcing its discovery, one stating that the plane would be flown, and the final transmission announcing plans to destroy the plane that night. Nabers was present when the aluminum plane was torched and burned beyond recognition, as was Sgt. Thomas E. Devine, among others who ignored warnings to stay away from the airfield, which had been declared off-limits. In addition to the many soldiers, Marines and Navy men who saw or knew of the presence and destruction of Amelia Earhart’s Electra on Saipan, three U.S. flag officers later shared their knowledge of the truth with Fred Goerner, acting against policy prohibiting the release of top-secret information, likely in order to encourage the long-suffering Goerner in his quest for the truth. Three others contacted Devine and corroborated his experience with the Earhart Electra on Saipan: Arthur Nash of Kaneohe, Bay, Oahu, Hawaii, a former captain in the Air Corps who was in a P-47group on Saipan; and former Marines Jerrell H. Chatham, of Avinger, Texas; and Robert L. Sowash, of Manor, Pennsylvania. In all, 26 Saipan veterans called and wrote to Devine to tell him about their own eyewitness experiences relative to Amelia Earhart and her airplane during the summer of 1944 on Saipan. Their accounts can be found in “Amelia Earhart: The Truth at Last,” and may be the subject of future stories in Marianas Variety. In late March 1965, a week before Fred Goerner’s meeting with Gen. Wallace M. Greene Jr. at Marine Corps Headquarters in Arlington, Virginia, who reputedly was the officer on Saipan who found the Earhart Electra in a hangar at As Lito Field, former Fleet Adm. Chester W. Nimitz called Goerner in San Francisco. "Now that you're going to Washington, Fred, I want to tell you Earhart and her navigator did go down in the Marshalls and were picked up by the picked up by the Japanese," Goerner said Nimitz told him. Two other U.S. flag officers told Goerner that Amelia Earhart died on Saipan. Gen. Alexander A. Vandegrift, the eighteenth commandant of the Marine Corps, privately admitted the truth to Goerner in a handwritten, August 1971 letter. "General Tommy Watson, who commanded the 2nd Marine Division during the assault on Saipan and stayed on that island after the fall of Okinawa, on one of my seven visits of inspection of his division told me that it had been substantiated that Miss Earhart met her death on Saipan," the handwritten letter states. "That is the total knowledge that I have of this incident. In writing to you, I did not realize that you wanted to quote my remarks about Miss Earhart and I would rather that you would not." In November 1966, several months after Fred Goerner’s “The Search for Amelia Earhart” was published, retired Gen. Graves B. Erskine, who as a Marine brigadier general was the deputy commander of the V Amphibious Corps during the Saipan invasion, accepted Goerner's invitation to visit the radio studies of KCBS in San Francisco for an interview. While waiting to go on the air with Goerner, Erskine told Jules Dundes, CBS West Coast vice president, and Dave McElhatton, a KCBS newsman, "It was established that Earhart was on Saipan. You'll have to dig the rest out for yourselves.” These fine men had no reason to lie about their knowledge of Earhart on Saipan, and every reason not to say anything at all, yet they risked their reputations, pensions and good standing with the U.S. military establishment by revealing the truth about Earhart to Goerner. The information they shared was still classified top secret, but they wanted to encourage Goerner and let him know that he was on the right track. Nimitz, Vandegrift and Erskine were all legendary, larger than life figures in the U.S. Pacific war, yet they supported his efforts as much as they could without seriously jeopardizing themselves. They all died of natural causes within a few years of their revelations to Goerner. As the foregoing witnesses and many others have attested, the presence and death of Amelia Earhart and Fred Noonan on Saipan after their July 2, 1937 disappearance is not a legend, rumor or myth. It is a stone, cold fact that the U.S. establishment and its media allies still deny, for very highly political reasons.
@bobwise1347
@bobwise1347 8 ай бұрын
i was the second gunman on the grassy knoll.
@josiewilson734
@josiewilson734 2 ай бұрын
But the photos shown aren't them alive in Japan so.
@gangiolini6201
@gangiolini6201 9 ай бұрын
Curious to see what will come out of this…If that technique proves efficient, maybe they could get these guys under contract to find Malaysian MH370…
@jimmyjames2903
@jimmyjames2903 9 ай бұрын
Another Elvis sighting 😮rest in peace 🙏🙏🙏
@darlingdiamondgaming6352
@darlingdiamondgaming6352 9 ай бұрын
ABC if you love these videos
@victoriathorne8252
@victoriathorne8252 9 ай бұрын
Tupac I’m sorry he’s not alive like Elvis I know we want to believe they’re still alive somewhere but I’m sorry they’re not Elvis died of a drug overdose that caused him to have a heart attack and Tupac and Biggie Smalls well, there are still lots of theories on what happened to them.
@WascallyWabbitt
@WascallyWabbitt 9 ай бұрын
Elvis died from a blocked colon.
@shaneharrison4775
@shaneharrison4775 9 ай бұрын
Nope you won't.
@TripleNpple
@TripleNpple 9 ай бұрын
She survived lived the rest of her days on Marshall islands
@rayanbennama9024
@rayanbennama9024 9 ай бұрын
Bros got all the fax he talkin to us from heaven
@johnteill_
@johnteill_ 5 ай бұрын
She didn't go missing...the good old boys took her for a ride
@carlthornton3076
@carlthornton3076 9 ай бұрын
Very Good!... #4 ✝ {2-4-2024}
@jwillow2642
@jwillow2642 9 ай бұрын
if she was on the island she must of been picked up & that would explain the photo from the history channel
@edsonkidwell2522
@edsonkidwell2522 4 ай бұрын
Please ditch the music quit watch due to it
@EarthAltar
@EarthAltar 9 ай бұрын
Are left handed people with no left hand right handed?
@KevinGreenwood-d8h
@KevinGreenwood-d8h 9 ай бұрын
With bones you can tell if it man or woman just by looking at the pelvic bones.
@ivansimms2802
@ivansimms2802 7 ай бұрын
She fucked up her navigation, ran out of gas, ditched in the ocean and was then consumed by the ocean,,,case closed🤔
@bryonkanyak8064
@bryonkanyak8064 9 ай бұрын
Now find jimmy hoffa!!!
@DouglasSpende-gb5gu
@DouglasSpende-gb5gu 7 ай бұрын
That was a useless show. Bring the dam plane up. If the bodies are not on the plane then they crash landed in the water. Popped out the life Raff's and got in. But 100 miles from land in a raft fighting weather and currents! Sharks?! 50 50. She had problems with her plane when she left. The mechanic told reports. They said her radio antenna was hay wire. So how could she send maydays? It takes 2 to 4 min for a plane to go under. Maybe less.
@pavel1809
@pavel1809 8 ай бұрын
salvage operation shroud be ther
@Elusive_05
@Elusive_05 9 ай бұрын
Imma try and make her dream come true
@GodblessthyUSA
@GodblessthyUSA 9 ай бұрын
Everyone forgets that Amelia Earhart was NOT ALONE (She was NOT SOLO) when she failed in her goal to fly around the world. Fred Noonan flew with her as her navigator. Although Fred Noonan is rarely mentioned, both were officially declared lost at sea on July 19, 1937. They never found Howland Island. She was not that great or spectacular in any way. She was built, promoted, and exploited by the lucrative sponsorship of the hero/idol/role model-creation era. Her fame is from her disappearance more than her accomplishments. She was however, an outspoken woman activist of the far left. And the Left Wing of politics has embraced her ever since. She cut her hair short and styled her own fashion clothes for women who preferred to look like men. Earhart lobbied Congress for abortion rights, supported women in politics and business, and endorsed the draft for men, women, and even the elderly to promote her version of equality.
@Ralphie5023
@Ralphie5023 4 ай бұрын
You need another ear ring .
@Helldiver_1
@Helldiver_1 9 ай бұрын
Nah jit made guan a little too weak 💀
@brianbrewer8346
@brianbrewer8346 9 ай бұрын
Did she have a middle name.???
@RoellesLife
@RoellesLife 9 ай бұрын
Amelia going to come back to life and tell us what has been going on all these year playing fake dead? Or is it just another Fake created news story?
@joeanderson9852
@joeanderson9852 9 ай бұрын
👍👍🙏🙏
@jonlong5197
@jonlong5197 9 ай бұрын
CLICK BAIT this video proves NOTHING!!! Dislike
@mistervacation23
@mistervacation23 4 ай бұрын
The Greatest bul$hit Story Ever Told
@bobmarshall3700
@bobmarshall3700 4 ай бұрын
Total misleading BS. Another little chap trying to milk the EA stories for whatever he can!
@carlpaladino427
@carlpaladino427 8 ай бұрын
Just another compilation of old and new facts with no conclusion. The mystery continues.
@aj-2savage896
@aj-2savage896 9 ай бұрын
If you're not picky and have 12 minutes to completely waste . . .
@Ggcgodoy
@Ggcgodoy 5 ай бұрын
Ths video is ridiculous😅
@kilo3457
@kilo3457 9 ай бұрын
Im black
@DavidBrady-m6c
@DavidBrady-m6c 9 ай бұрын
I am 2 so🤔
@alijordan4141
@alijordan4141 9 ай бұрын
I'm green with envy!!
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