The Department of Defense POW/Missing Personnel Office
(DPMO) announced today that the remains of a serviceman, missing from the
Vietnam War, has been identified and will be returned to his family for burial
with full military honors.
U.S. Air Force Col. Francis J. McGouldrick Jr. of New Haven,
Conn., will be buried Dec. 13, at Arlington National Cemetery. On Dec. 13, 1968, McGouldrick was on a night
strike mission when his B-57E Canberra aircraft collided with another aircraft
over Savannakhet Province, Laos.
McGouldrick was never seen again and was listed as missing in action.
After the war in July 1978, a military review board amended
his official status from missing in action to presumed killed in action.
Between 1993 and 2004, joint U.S/Lao People’s Democratic
Republic (L.P.D.R.) teams attempted to locate the crash site with no
success. On April 8, 2007, a joint team
located a possible crash site near the village of Keng Keuk, Laos.
From October 2011 to May 2012, joint U.S./L.P.D.R. teams
excavated the site three times and recovered human remains and aircraft
wreckage consistence with a B-57E aircraft.
In the identification of McGouldrick, scientists from the
Joint POW/MIA Accounting Command (JPAC) and the Armed Forces DNA Identification
Laboratory (AFDIL) used circumstantial evidence and forensic identification
tools, such as mitochondrial DNA – which matched McGouldrick’s great nephew and
niece.
Today there are 1,644 American service members that are
still unaccounted-for from the Vietnam War.
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 703-699-1169.
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