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Marine Missing From Vietnam War Is Identified
The Department of Defense POW/Missing Personnel Office (DPMO) announced
today that the remains of a U.S. serviceman, missing from the Vietnam
War, have been identified and will be returned to his family for burial
with full military honors.
He is Cpl. Jim E. Moshier, U.S. Marine Corps, of Bakersfield, Calif. He will be buried Wednesday in Bakersfield.
On June 11, 1967, Moshier
was one of 11 passengers on board a CH-46A Sea Knight helicopter that
was inserting forces into Quang Tri Province, South Vietnam, when the
aircraft was struck by enemy ground fire and crashed. Pilots from two
nearby helicopters saw the crash and reported that none of the men on
board could have survived. Aircraft flew over the site for several
hours, but saw no survivors. A ground patrol attempted to access the
site the next day, but could not because of the large concentration of
enemy forces in the area. Two weeks later, a reconnaissance patrol was
within 25 meters of the crash site, but extensive enemy activity
prevented the team from approaching closer.
Between 1993 and 1994,
U.S./Socialist Republic of Vietnam (S.R.V.) teams, led by the Joint
POW/MIA Accounting Command (JPAC), conducted two surveys of the site,
and interviewed several Vietnamese citizens who said they witnessed the
crash. Two of the citizens claimed to have seen bone fragments while
scavenging the site years earlier. The teams found small pieces of
wreckage, but no human remains.
In May 2005, Vietnamese
officials notified U.S. officials that possible human remains were
present at a district security compound in Quang Tri Province. The
Vietnamese reported they confiscated the remains and other items,
including Moshier’s identification tag, from a Vietnamese citizen in
1996. The remains were then buried in the security compound, but the ID
tag and other items had supposedly been lost over the years. Later that
month, a U.S./S.R.V. team excavated the secondary burial site in the
security compound and recovered a box containing human
remains.
Among other
forensic identification tools and circumstantial evidence, scientists
from JPAC and the Armed Forces DNA Identification Laboratory also used
mitochondrial DNA in the identification of Moshier’s remains. Remains
from one of the other servicemembers on board the aircraft, Pfc. James
E. Widener, U.S. Marine Corps, were identified in August 2006.
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