Roger Nelson (skydiver)

Roger Nelson

Roger Warren Nelson[1] (October 25, 1955 – June 7, 2003) was a skydiver and founder of Skydive Chicago, one of the USA's largest skydiving centers.[2]

Freak Brothers

Roger and his older brother, Carl Nelson, grew up in the small town of Lisle, Illinois. They began their skydiving careers in 1971 as novice parachutists at a drop-zone surrounded by cornfields in Hinckley, Illinois. At the time, relative work (RW) or formation skydiving was in its infancy. Carl and Roger Nelson, unlike most skydivers at the time, were not ex-military and had the '70s hippie look, with long hair and grubby clothes. They became known as the Freak Brothers. The name stuck. A form of flying that they later popularized (anything that was not belly to earth) became known as freak-flying—eventually morphing into freeflying.

The Freak Brothers became an inclusive organization for skydivers, with thousands of Freak Brothers world wide. Roger, his wife Jeannie and Carl organised the first large skydiving boogies in the form of the annual Freak Brothers Convention, which was later superseded by the World FreeFall Convention.[3]

Carl, an accomplished skydiver with over 1,000 jumps, died in a skydiving accident in 1979.

Later life

Nelson went on to become a U.S. National Skydiving Champion and served as a director of the U.S. Parachute Association.[4] He set four world records and earned a gold medal in national competition. With over 6,000 jumps and 100 hours of freefall, Roger was involved in television, lectures and authored numerous books and articles on the sport. He earned his wings as a commercial pilot with over 10,000 flight hours.

In 1987, Roger pleaded guilty to tax evasion and was sentenced to ten years in federal prison for unreported income related to his international drug smuggling operation.[5] He served five years with time off for good behavior. Nelson, Federal Bureau of Prisons (BOP) Register # 95870-024, was released from BOP custody on December 18, 1992.[6]

Nelson organized numerous attempts to break the world record for "largest skydiving formation".[7][8]

Death

In 2003, he was killed in a skydiving accident. He was landing his parachute with a group of skydivers when another jumper collided with his parachute, causing it to collapse. Nelson then fell about 50 feet and received fatal injuries.[9]

References

External links

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