The Department of Defense POW/Missing
Personnel Office (DPMO) announced today that the remains of six servicemen,
missing in action from the Vietnam War, were recently identified and are being
returned to their families for burial with full military honors.
Air Force Col. Joseph Christiano
of Rochester, N.Y.; Col. Derrell B. Jeffords of Florence, S.C.; Lt. Col. Dennis
L. Eilers of Cedar Rapids, Iowa; Chief Master Sgt. William K. Colwell of Glen
Cove, N.Y.; Chief Master Sgt. Arden K. Hassenger of Lebanon, Ore.; and Chief
Master Sgt. Larry C. Thornton of Idaho Falls, Idaho, will be buried as a group
in a single casket representing the entire crew on July 9 in Arlington National
Cemetery. On Dec. 24, 1965, the crew was
aboard an AC-47D aircraft nicknamed “Spooky” that failed to return from a
combat strike mission in southern Laos.
After a “mayday” signal was sent, all contact was lost with the
crew. Following the crash, two days of
search efforts for the aircraft and crew were unsuccessful.
In 1995, a joint United States-Lao
People’s Democratic Republic (L.P.D.R.) team investigated a crash in
Savannakhet Province, Laos. Local
villagers recalled seeing a two-propeller aircraft, similar to an AC-47D, crash
in December 1965. A local man found
aircraft wreckage in a nearby field while farming, and led the team to that
location. The team recovered small
pieces of aircraft wreckage at that time and recommended further investigative
visits.
Joint U.S.-L.P.D.R. investigation and recovery
teams re-visited the site four times from 1999 to 2001. They conducted additional interviews with
locals, recovered military equipment, and began an excavation. No human remains were recovered, so the
excavation was suspended pending additional investigation.
In 2010, joint U.S.-L.P.D.R. recovery
teams again excavated the crash site.
The team recovered human remains, personal items, and military
equipment. Three additional excavations
in 2011 recovered additional human remains and evidence.
Scientists from the Joint POW/MIA
Accounting Command used dental records and circumstantial evidence in the
identification of their remains.
For additional information on the
Defense Department’s mission to account for missing Americans, visit the DPMO
website at http://www.dtic.mil/dpmo or call 703-699-1420.
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