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Pilot's trail of deceit across U.S.
Date: 1/14/2009 Album ID: 671372
Photos by Associated Press, Phil Sears and Robbyn Brooks
Pilot Marc Schrenker faked an in-flight emergency, bailed out of his plane, then led authorities on a chase that ended in Quincy, Fla.
Wanda Brooks, whose family owns the storage business, walks toward an empty storage unit at 280 East Mini Warehouse in Harpersville, Ala., on Tuesday, Jan. 13, 2009. Authorities believe missing Indiana pilot Marcus Schrenker rode off on a red motorcycle stored in the unit after he parachuted out of an airplane over Alabama on Sunday. Photo by AP
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A single-engine Piper Malibu Meridian flown by Marcus Schrenker is seen after having crashed in East Milton, Fla.An Indiana businessman whose financial management companies were under investigation apparently bailed out of his small plane and let it crash in what may have been an elaborate attempt to fake his own death. Photo by AP.
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Latex gloves sit on a picnic table near the spot where U.S. Marshals took Marcus Schrenker into custody Tuesday, Jan. 13, 2009 at the KOA campground in Chattahoochee, Fla. U.S. federal authorities say the pilot at the center of a plane crash mystery has been found alive in northern Florida after he apparently slit one of his wrists. Photo by Phil Sears, Tallahassee Democrat
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Latex gloves sit on a picnic table near the spot where U.S. Marshals took Marcus Schrenker into custody Tuesday, Jan. 13, 2009 at the KOA campground in Chattahoochee, Fla. U.S. federal authorities say the pilot at the center of a plane crash mystery has been found alive in northern Florida after he apparently slit one of his wrists. Photo by Phil Sears, Tallahassee Democrat
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The entrance to the KOA campground in Chattahoochee, Fla. where U.S. Marshals took Marcus Schrenker into custody is photographed Tuesday, Jan. 13, 2009. U.S. federal authorities say the pilot at the center of a plane crash mystery has been found alive in northern Florida after he apparently slit one of his wrists. Photo by Phil Sears, Tallahassee Democrat
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The interior of a storage unit where authorities believe missing Indiana pilot Marcus Schrenker stored a red motorcycle he used to flee after parachuting out of an airplane over Alabama is seen Tuesday, Jan. 13, 2009, in Harpersville, Ala.. Owners of the business say a piece of lumber and a tarp were all that remained in the room after a man believed to be Schrenker removed the motorcycle. Photo by AP
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A motel registration form filled out by a man believed by police to be missing Indiana pilot Marcus Schrenker is seen Tuesday, Jan. 13, 2009, in Harpersville, Ala. Authorities believe the man parachuted from a plane in Alabama Sunday and checked into the hotel briefly under an assumed name before fleeing on a motorcycle he stored at a nearby mini-warehouse. Photo by AP
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The lights burn at the office for the KOA campground in Chattahoochee, Fla., near the spot where U.S. Marshals took Marcus Schrenker into custody Tuesday, Jan. 13, 2009. Officers from the U.S. Marshal's office in Tallahassee, Fla., found Schrenker inside a tent at the campground. Photo by Phil Sears, Tallahassee Democrat
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Light snow falls on the home of missing Indiana businessman Marcus Schrenker in McCordsville, Ind., Tuesday, Jan. 13, 2009. Federal marshals on Tuesday pressed their search for the investment manager they believe faked a distress call before parachuting from his plane over Alabama and disappearing on a motorcycle he had stashed in advance. Photo by AP
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The office of missing Indiana businessman Marcus Schrenker is in McCordsville, Ind.,building seen Tuesday, Jan. 13, 2009. Authorities believe Schrenker disappeared into the woods southeast of Birmingham, Ala., after jumping from his single-engine plane, which continued on auto pilot until it crashed in a swampy area near homes in the Florida panhandle. Authorities were trying to figure out if it was all an attempt by Schrenker, 38, to fake his own death after his wife filed for divorce, his companies were targeted by investigators and he lost a half-million dollars in a court case. Photo by AP
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Marcus Schrenker's stepmother's residence at Sandestin. Photo by Robbyn Brooks, Daily News
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Marcus Schrenker's stepmother's residence at Sandestin. Photo by Robbyn Brooks, Daily News
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The Harpersville Motel in Harpersville, Ala. is seen Monday, Jan. 12, 2009. An Indiana businessman whose financial management companies were under investigation apparently bailed out of his small plane and let it crash in what may have been an elaborate attempt to fake his own death. The case grew stranger Monday morning, when a man with Schrenker's license told police that he'd been in a canoe accident with friends. The officers, unaware of the plane crash, took him to the Harpersville Motel. Photo by AP
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