Joel Thrift Law LLC - August 2025

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404-618-4816 JoelThrift.com 2860 Piedmont Road NE, Ste. 115 Atlanta, GA 30308

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INSIDE THIS ISSUE

Trying to Stay Cool Until Fall

1

A Softer Step Into Retirement

2

The Nuttiest Car in America

Strawberry Shortcake Ice Cream Bars

3

Why Pets Beat Pay Raises

The Ghost Flight of L-8

4

The Day a Blimp Lost Its Crew WWII’S REAL-LIFE AVIATION GHOST STORY

briefcase full of classified documents were still there. The engines and radio worked, yet Lt. Ernest DeWitt Cody and Ensign Charles Ellis Adams were gone without a trace. Theories popped up fast. Maybe one man fell out, and

In August 1942, a Navy blimp called L-8 floated over a neighborhood near San Francisco. But when it came down, something vitally important was missing. The L-8 had taken off on a routine patrol that morning, scouting for enemy submarines off the California coast. Around 7:50 a.m., the crew radioed that they were checking out a suspicious oil slick. After that, the blimp went silent. Witnesses later reported seeing it drift far off course, rise too high, and then lose altitude and bump into rooftops and power lines. By the time it landed, thousands of locals had gathered. Everyone had the same question: Where did the crew go? Inside the gondola, nothing seemed out of place. The life raft, parachutes, and even a

the other tried to save him. Maybe both jumped into the ocean and

vanished. Some even whispered about secret missions gone wrong or unknown equipment failures, but no hard evidence ever surfaced.

Following the incident and a thorough review, the Navy repaired the blimp and returned it to service. But the crew’s disappearance never made sense — no wreckage, no radio calls, and not a single clue.

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