28. ZAHIR RAIHAN
In 2013, Chowdhury Mueen-Uddin was convicted of abducting and killing intellectuals around this time. However, the trial was tainted by possible political bias, and Mueen-current Uddin’s Great Britain home refused to extradite him. The tragic part is that Raihan could only be kidnapped because he was looking for his brother. The Dhaka Tribune claims that Raihan’s brother was abducted from Dhaka’s streets two days before the war ended. When the dust settled, Raihan went in search of him, only to vanish himself. It’s almost certain that both were murdered to support Bangladeshi independence.
29. D.B. Cooper
Before disappearing, DB Cooper wasn’t famous. Cooper was shown a note from Portland to Seattle on November 24, 1971. He demanded an airplane landing, a $200,000 meeting, and parachutes. Upon landing, ransom money and parachutes were collected and passengers discharged. It started again after refueling to Mexico as instructed. Cooper tied an air parachute, grabbed the money, and jumped. Cooper’s jump was unlikely to survive researchers. He was inexperienced and in poor jumping conditions. Some disintegrated ransom money was found on Columbia River banks in February 1980, but that was a decade-old parachute strap until the other day.