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Soldier Missing in Action From the Korean War is Identified
The Department of Defense POW/Missing Personnel Office (DPMO) announced
today that the remains of a U.S. serviceman, missing in action from the
Korean War, have been identified and returned to his family for burial
with full military honors.
He is Cpl. Edward F. Blazejewski, U.S. Army, of Elizabeth,
N.J. He is to be buried in Arlington National Cemetery near Washington,
D.C. on Friday.
Blazejewski was assigned to Medical Company, 8th Cavalry
Regiment, when his unit came under heavy artillery attack by Chinese
forces near Unsan, North Korea, on Nov. 1, 1950. During the attack,
Cpl. Blazejewski and other soldiers killed in action were left behind
when their unit moved to a previous defensive position. A U.S. soldier
who had been held as a prisoner of war by the North Koreans told
debriefers that Blazejewski and others had been killed by a grenade
explosion.
In August 1997, a joint U.S.-North Korean team, led by the
Joint POW/MIA Accounting Command (JPAC) excavated a site in Pyongan
Province believed to contain the remains of several U.S. soldiers.
Remains representing four men were recovered, as well as an
identification tag and a denture, neither of which were associated with
Blazejewski.
The other three soldiers were identified and buried in 2000.
Buried at Arlington were Sgt. James T. Higgins, Benham, Ky.; and Pfc.
John L. Hoey, Philadelphia, Pa. Sgt. Andrew Ernandis, Brooklyn, N.Y.,
was buried in Hicksville, N.Y. Group remains representing all four
soldiers will also be buried Friday at Arlington.
Among other forensic identification tools, scientists from
JPAC and the Armed Forces DNA Identification Laboratory also used
mitochondrial DNA in the identification of Blazejewski’s remains,
matching a DNA sequence from a maternal relative.
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