Show me the water on Jake’s chin, left arm and shirt. Is your wild claim now that Jake’s hair got wet but his face and left arm didn’t?
And those aren’t divers at the plane but splashes from waves breaking over the two antennas.
And I take it you agree that the floating hand was not the maniki’s.
If you have no aviation awareness, please don't bother trying to pass such things off to those who do. You're only hurting your own credibility.
All you're really doing is showing us all the great lengths to which you'll go in saying anything in defense of this scenario, as if it were credible. But, that's actually be clear from your earlier posts, too, for those who could see it.
This was a hoax, one that cost the taxpayers scores of millions of dollars. A lot of interested people want to see that set aright. I'm just the messenger. If it weren't me doing it, there's plenty of other aviation folk and lawyer-types that have this information, too, to be able to share and work it if I'm not here. Get used to it--all of it.
The salvor would later try to explain to the media that the plane was taken apart in a winter swell. Well, no, divers were already busy working on the engine even as the plane occupants were around it, as seen by the copious bubbles above the flight deck and engine in the following picture:
Jake's brown hair was not at that time long enough to reach more than an inch or two past the tops of his shoulders, but the picture has red hair to the middle of his back or even farther, even while still wavy and probably not water soaked--not that wetness matters here.
Splashes from waves breaking over the two antennas." See those top three pictures in #452 again, and how the plane rises out of the water and that the green slip-n-slide has been placed against the side door--all by divers engaged in a hoax and its cover-up!
Waves! That explains it! I suppose the plane ran into a rowboat that the "capricious currents" happened to bring along?
You can make a guy laugh!