The
Department of Defense POW/Missing Personnel Office (DPMO) announced today that
a Navy pilot, missing from the Vietnam War, has been accounted for and will be
buried with full military honors along with his crew.
Navy
Lt. Dennis W. Peterson of Huntington Park, Calif., was the pilot of a SH-3A
helicopter that crashed in Ha Nam Province, North Vietnam. Peterson was accounted for on March 30,
2012. Also, aboard the aircraft was
Ensign Donald P. Frye of Los Angeles, Calif.; Aviation Antisubmarine Warfare
Technicians William B. Jackson of Stockdale, Texas; and Donald P. McGrane of
Waverly, Iowa. The crew will be buried,
as a group, on May 2 at Arlington National Cemetery.
On
July 19, 1967, the four servicemen took off from the USS Hornet aboard an SH-3A
Sea King helicopter, on a search and rescue mission looking for a downed pilot
in Ha Nam Province, North Vietnam.
During the mission, an enemy concealed 37mm gun position targeted the
helicopter as it flew in. The helicopter
was hit by the anti-aircraft gunfire, causing the aircraft to lose control,
catch fire and crash, killing all four servicemen.
In
October 1982, the Socialist Republic of Vietnam (S.R.V.) repatriated five boxes
of remains to U.S. officials. In 2009,
the remains within the boxes were identified as Frye, Jackson, and
McGrane.
In
1993, a joint U.S./S.R.V. team, investigated a loss in Ha Nam Province. The team interviewed local villagers who
identified possible burial sites linked to the loss. One local claimed to have buried two of the
crewmen near the wreckage, but indicated that both graves had subsequently been
exhumed.
Between
1994 and 2000, three joint U.S./S.R.V. teams excavated the previous site and
recovered human remains and aircraft wreckage that correlated to the crew's
SH-3A helicopter. In 2000, U.S.
personnel excavated the crash site recovering additional remains. Analysis from the Joint POW/MIA Command
Central Identification Laboratory subsequently designated these additional
remains as the co-mingled remains of all four crewmen, including Peterson.
DoD
scientists used forensic tools and circumstantial evidence in the
identification of the remains.
For
additional information on the Defense Department's mission to account for
missing Americans, visit the DPMO website at www.dtic.mil/dpmo or call
703-699-1420.
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