So far, I have 2 likely candidates in my effort to ID the Albatross in question:
N48318, HU-16B c/n G-244, USAF s/n 51-7187
SALE REPORTED
5951 S WILMOT RD
TUCSON, AZ 85706-8873
History:
MASDC as HP0056, then to civil registry as N48318, ZP-TWV, N48318 again
in 1987, but seized by US Marshalls. N187JK no longer reserved. Ex-Jay Koven, Montclair, NJ; Sale reported to Western International Aviation
N3JY, HU-16B c/n G-211, USAF s/n 51-7161
Registered 8/13/1986 to
CORPCON BUSINESS SERVICES INC
(John Yost, Registered Agent, President/Secretary/Treasurer)
3015 N OCEAN BLVD SUITE 116-284
FT LAUDERDALE, FL 33308
Note: Corpcon Business Services involuntarily dissolved 11/16/1987
History:
USAF to Spanish AF as AD.1B-11, then to civil registry as N29850, G-BMDX, N2ML, N23ML, & finally N3JY (8/13/86)
The reasoning behind the first one is obvious, but no mention was made in the records I found that it was "bombed" or blown up.
The second one might fit simply because of the dates, location, and the curiously "sudden" involuntary dissolution of the company.
Ray Wolfe's database has this notation regarding
N48318 (c/n G-244) - "Reported in TUS being parted out due to airframe corrosion."
Maybe that is some more good, old "American" geography and the reporter (or the US Marshalls) just didn't know the difference between New Mexico and Arizona.
I also hear that conventional explosives residues can be quite "corrosive" to aluminum airframes.
