Figured I'd drop this here before I drop this on my site in a few hours, after I'm done reading and writing and researching
Refer to Q post 1869, where he asked:
>How many billionaires own islands?
>How many billionaires live on islands?
Full post, just for reference:
>Calculate probability.
>What is the mathematical probability that a rogue missile launched >at/near the runaway plane?
>Was he a trained pilot?
>How fast did intercept occur?
>Think missile intercept.
>Think aircraft.
>Outside of standard deviation?
>Do people travel to islands to [Fish]?
>How many billionaires own islands?
>How many billionaires live on islands?
>[GEO-T]
>CLANDESTINE.
>Q
He gave us two criteria for looking around that area. There had to be a billionaire, and this billionaire had to have a private island.
I started searching and came up with the name James Jannard - the billionaire who started Oakley.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jim_Jannard
The guy started Oakley, went public, sold the company to Luxotica for billions, then started RED Camera - which gave him a ton of Hollywood connections.
The island he bought - Spieden Island - used to be a private hunting enclave, filled with exotic animals. Rich people could fly in at the private air strip, and spend days shooting things. Sound familiar? (Think Black Forest).
Oh, and that's not the only island he owns. He also owns… ready for it?
The Fiji islands of Kaibu and Vatu Vara.
I think we've got a likely candidate for our SAM operator. And just, geographically, for a moment:
Drone plane takes off from SEATAC. Heads North-West.
Missile is fired from Spieden Island. Drone redirects south to put some distance between itself and the missile.
F-15s take off from Whidbey and intercept the missile.
They remain in the air as an escort.
White hats crash the drone (for reasons we haven't completely understood yet).
How's that look to you, anons?