airdog07
August 27th, 2014, 11:08 PM
Who are the Downtown mystery jumpers?http://www.gannett-cdn.com/-mm-/12e97e8ddff39c3b8038b69940af088c9028e5e7/c=0-0-200-200&r=1024x1024&r=26&c=26x26/local/-/media/Cincinnati/USATODAY/2014/04/22//1398197709000-amarotti.jpg Ally Marotti, amarotti@enquirer.com 1:45 p.m. EDT July 21, 2014
http://www.gannett-cdn.com/-mm-/7321e33f15082d0c4fdab300dd079bd6d2f8f11d/c=516-385-2729-2050&r=x404&c=534x401/local/-/media/Cincinnati/Cincinnati/2014/07/21/1405958174000-1photo.JPG
(Photo: The Enquirer/Shauna Steigerwald)
A group of people parachuted onto a downtown Cincinnati parking garage Monday morning, but no one seems to know who they were or where they came from.
At least five people in parachutes sailed through the skies above Downtown and landed on top of the parking garage at Fourth and Elm streets at about 9:40 a.m. They quickly rolled up their chutes and headed for the exit.
It is unclear if the group jumped from an aircraft or a building.
Carew Tower has long been used as a launch pad for Building Antenna Structure Earth (BASE) jumping, in which participants jump off buildings or other tall structures.
A security guard who answered the phone at the Carew Tower Observation Deck said she had not noticed anything unusual, but that she had not been at the deck all morning. Calls to the building manager's office went unanswered.
Cincinnati BASE, a group that meets to BASE jump, did not return an email requesting comment.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AcZqhTYZ6Ak
In one YouTube video, a group of BASE jumpers land on the same parking garage as the group Monday morning after having jumped off the Carew Tower.
Officials throughout the area indicated they had not been informed of the parachuters.
A Cincinnati police officer from District 1, which includes Downtown, had not been informed of any parachuters and had not seen them. Tiffaney Hardy, police spokeswoman, said she would check into the parachuters.
An air-traffic controller at Cincinnati Municipal Lunken Airport had not been informed of any aircraft with jumpers in the area. He said they typically receive notifications of any such events.
An official at Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Airport also had not heard of anything, although he said that since Downtown is about 15 miles from the airport, it would not be unusual if the airport did not receive notifications about parachuters.
A city spokesman also said he would check.
http://www.gannett-cdn.com/-mm-/7321e33f15082d0c4fdab300dd079bd6d2f8f11d/c=516-385-2729-2050&r=x404&c=534x401/local/-/media/Cincinnati/Cincinnati/2014/07/21/1405958174000-1photo.JPG
(Photo: The Enquirer/Shauna Steigerwald)
A group of people parachuted onto a downtown Cincinnati parking garage Monday morning, but no one seems to know who they were or where they came from.
At least five people in parachutes sailed through the skies above Downtown and landed on top of the parking garage at Fourth and Elm streets at about 9:40 a.m. They quickly rolled up their chutes and headed for the exit.
It is unclear if the group jumped from an aircraft or a building.
Carew Tower has long been used as a launch pad for Building Antenna Structure Earth (BASE) jumping, in which participants jump off buildings or other tall structures.
A security guard who answered the phone at the Carew Tower Observation Deck said she had not noticed anything unusual, but that she had not been at the deck all morning. Calls to the building manager's office went unanswered.
Cincinnati BASE, a group that meets to BASE jump, did not return an email requesting comment.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AcZqhTYZ6Ak
In one YouTube video, a group of BASE jumpers land on the same parking garage as the group Monday morning after having jumped off the Carew Tower.
Officials throughout the area indicated they had not been informed of the parachuters.
A Cincinnati police officer from District 1, which includes Downtown, had not been informed of any parachuters and had not seen them. Tiffaney Hardy, police spokeswoman, said she would check into the parachuters.
An air-traffic controller at Cincinnati Municipal Lunken Airport had not been informed of any aircraft with jumpers in the area. He said they typically receive notifications of any such events.
An official at Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Airport also had not heard of anything, although he said that since Downtown is about 15 miles from the airport, it would not be unusual if the airport did not receive notifications about parachuters.
A city spokesman also said he would check.