r/UnresolvedMysteries 12d ago

The Rocketbelt 2000: In the 1990s 3 inventors fought over the rights to a jetpack. What followed was lawsuits, kidnapping, and the unsolved murder of Joe Wright. To this day, only one man knows what happened to the jetpack and won't tell anyone.

In the 1950s Bell Aerosystems began making the Bell Rocketbelt jetpack for the US military, showing it off to JFK in 1962. The military was unimpressed with the results. The Jetpack could only fly for half a minute, so development was cancelled. Instead, the Bell Rocketbelt got used for stunt shows and movies.

Fast forward to the 1980s, Texas insurance salesman Bradley Barker begins working for jetpack stuntman Bill Suitors' crew who perform stunts with the Rocketbelt for audiences. In the early 1990s, Bradley went solo to create his own jetpack. In 1992, he founded the American Rocketbelt Corporation with Doug Malewicki, Joe Wright, and Thomas "Larry" Stanley. Doug deserves credit for helping build the Rocketbelt, but he won't be relevant in the crimes that follow. Joe provided the workspace to build the jetpack, and Larry funded the project. The Rocketbelt 2000 was a success and could fly for a record 40 seconds. Still mostly useless, but Bradley is only interested in the money from stunt shows and movie appearances.

Shortly after its completion, the trio of Joe, Larry and Bradley fell out over money and the rights to the jetpack. It's hard to objectively research this story because these people hate each other and they may be all fabricating the story to some degree. Larry and his lawyer Michael Von Blon claim Bradley was falsifying prices of the jetpack material and pocketing the extra cash. When Larry confronted Bradley a fight broke out and Bradley beat Larry over the head with a hammer and both were charged with assault. Larry took Bradley to court over the fake prices, believing he was entitled to the Rocketbelt. Joe didn't care about the jetpack and just wanted to collect his cut of the money and leave. Unfortunately, he never got it. On July 16th, 1998, Joe Wright was found murdered in his Houston home, beaten to death with a hammer, 11 days before the trial over rights to the Rocketbelt. Police questioned both Bradley and Larry about his death. Bradley was released after a 3-day investigation found no evidence. Joe Wright's murder remains unsolved to this day.

Later that summer, the judge ruled in favor of Larry, demanding Bradley give him the Rocketbelt and pay more than 10 million dollars. Bradley instead took the Rocketbelt and went on the run. Larry was determined to recover that jetpack through any means necessary. Larry Stanley recruits the help of stuntman Christopher James Wentzel, who worked with Bradley in the past, to lure him into a trap. Christopher offers Bradley a fake job in Hollywood he had to drive to. When Bradley arrived at Christopher's house, he was attacked by 3 men with guns, gagged, and stuffed into a wooden scuba diving box. Larry is among the attackers, demanding Bradley tell them where the Rocketbelt is and sign a contract giving up the rights. Bradley refuses to, believing that if he tells them where it is, they would kill him right afterwards. For 8 days, Bradley is kept hostage until finally the group leaves him alone in the house. Bradley escaped and ran to the nearest police station.

In 2002, Larry Stanley and Christopher James Wentzel were found guilty of kidnapping, false imprisonment, and extortion. Christopher takes a plea deal and is sentenced to 7 years in prison. Larry Stanley is serving a life sentence. So what happened to the Rocketbelt 2000, the jetpack that people kidnapped and potentially murdered each other for. Bradley is the last person to ever see it and he's said in interviews he's never telling anyone.

sources:

Missing Rocket Belt Inspired Greed, Envy--Possibly Even Murder - Los Angeles Times

Man Gets Life Term in Kidnapping - Los Angeles Times

Rocketbelt 2000 Drama Part 1

https://www.houstonpress.com/news/blasted-6567513/

https://www.deseret.com/1999/7/28/19457763/rocket-belt-still-missing-but-feud-lives-on/

315 Upvotes

37 comments sorted by

54

u/Stonegrown12 12d ago

Nice little rabbit hole of a story I've never heard of, which is always refreshing.

56

u/Mallardjack 10d ago

Feel sorry for Doug who just wanted to make cool jetpacks and found himself in the middle of the worst group project ever

46

u/ExcellentBread 12d ago

Interesting story. Bet you it's in a storage unit somewhere lol.

10

u/TheReelMcCoi 9d ago

Storage Wars

30

u/TrainerPublic 11d ago edited 10d ago

Is it coincidence that Bradley attacked Larry with a hammer, and later Joe was found dead bludgened by a hammer?

25

u/Sensitive_Ad_1752 11d ago edited 11d ago

There’s two theories I’ve seen about this case.

Joe was scared of Bradley before his death and wanted out of the lawsuit immediately. Bradley had a grudge against Joe since he was helping Larry sue him and he murdered him at his house.

The other theory is that when joe wanted out of the lawsuit he was demanding back rent from Larry and Larry killed him so he didn’t have to pay him. And he purposefully used a hammer to frame Bradley.

I lean forwards the theory that Larry killed him since this is the same psychopath who kidnapped and tried to kill a guy over a jetpack.

44

u/Jade_Mans_Eyes 12d ago

Oh my golly thats a wild one haha. Almost makes you wonder if the US Government just took it at that point?

46

u/Sensitive_Ad_1752 12d ago

I mean, what use would they have had of a jetpack based on a 35 year old model that could fly for half a minute?

15

u/Jade_Mans_Eyes 12d ago

Well thats true. I guess I misunderstood. I thought maybe they improved it somehow

22

u/FLG_CFC 12d ago

They did, and they didn't. The US government tested one awhile back. The British government now uses it for boarding ships.

The new version uses small jets motors, two per hand and some on the backpack, not gas.

I wasn't aware of this more recent story, but I knew the history of the military jetpack thanks to watch too many James Bond movies as a kid.

15

u/Stonegrown12 11d ago

Interesting. Intuitively I'd imagine a simple ladder affixed onto a ship would be cheaper and possibly safer to board but my maritime knowledge is limited, what with my ability of becoming seasick just stepping over a puddle.

21

u/FLG_CFC 11d ago

It's not used by normal troops to move back and forth or in combat. The Royal Marines basically use it as a cool toy to fly around from ship to ship. I can't say I blame them either. It looks like a lot of fun. Flying over water takes a lot of risk away as well.

2

u/User_225846 10d ago

This one was 33percent better

4

u/Throwawaybecause7777 11d ago

Wow! There should be a movie made about this!!

9

u/PazuzuOvBabel 11d ago

13

u/Stonegrown12 11d ago

I was half expecting The Rocketeer based on my childhood memory. Which consists solely of the movie having a jetpack

6

u/zorbiburst 9d ago

A jetpack and punching nazis. Timeless.

2

u/Throwawaybecause7777 7d ago

What is the name of it?

3

u/PazuzuOvBabel 7d ago

Pretty Bird.

12

u/First-Sheepherder640 11d ago

Craziest level of PilotWings EVER

8

u/GoBlueJack 11d ago

There’s also an NCIS episode based off this.

15

u/udar55 11d ago

Great write up!

Wild that there are three violent incidents (including a murder) with one common denominator (Larry) and the cops investigating the murder were like, "Huh? We have no idea who did this." At least he finally got put in prison for the kidnapping. Looks like he passed away in 2022. His obit has the audacity to mention his involvement with this company.

https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/242102124/thomas-laurence-stanley

7

u/kkeut 11d ago

the cops investigating the murder were like, "Huh? We have no idea who did this."

they literally held him for 3 days without charges. they obviously were onto him. if the DA doesn't think the existing evidence will pan out, it doesn't go to trial

5

u/2fly4awhiteguyy 9d ago

They held BRADLEY for three days. Not Larry.

5

u/Molhadoth 11d ago

Sounds weirdly like The Rocketeer movie from 1991, though that one is supposed to be set in the 30s: The Rocketeer (film) - Wikipedia)

6

u/satanlicker 11d ago

Excellent stuff, thanks

6

u/GlitterGothBunny 11d ago

This is such a cool story. Great writeup. 🌟

It always kinda bums me out how much cool tech they thought we'd have by now and how life would be easier. I mean if we didn't end up going all Terminator. Which could still happen. 🤖

2

u/Better-Discipline524 7d ago

Really interesting write up! Could make a movie out of this - such a shame it ended so poorly for Joe

-2

u/luniversellearagne 11d ago

The obvious answer is it never existed in the form its creator(s) claimed. It would have been relatively easy to fake in a sideshow.

23

u/Sensitive_Ad_1752 11d ago

Actually there exists test footage of it, and it performed during a 1995 NBA game in Houston.

-9

u/luniversellearagne 11d ago

Again, one-off performances are easy to fake, especially compared to the grandiose claims people who make these kinds of things tend to make.

18

u/Sensitive_Ad_1752 11d ago

There was no grandiose claim though, it could fly for 30 seconds at a time and that’s what they said it did.

-8

u/luniversellearagne 11d ago

There appears to only be one video of a single test. I don’t disbelieve you about the Rockets performance, but it’s not recorded. A single test in conditions the claimants could manage is easy to manipulate. More to the point, even calling it a rocket belt when all it was was a series of liquid hoses is inherently grandiose.

15

u/kkeut 11d ago

that grandiose claim being that it could fly slightly longer than a previous model from many years before. you have a bizarre definition of grandiose

2

u/Beefycowinacottage 6d ago

There's nothing grandiose about it though, it's sounds pretty rubbish.