|
Missing World War II Airmen Identified
The Department of Defense POW/Missing Personnel Office (DPMO) announced
today that the remains of four U.S. servicemen, missing in action from
World War II, have been identified and returned to their families for
burial with full military honors.
They are 1st Lt. Robert H. Miller, of Providence, R.I.; 2nd
Lt. Robert L. Hale, of Newtonville, Mass.; Staff Sgt. Joseph A. Berube,
of Fall River, Mass.; and Staff Sgt. Glendon E. Harris, of North
Monmouth, Maine; all U.S. Army Air Forces. Miller, Hale and Berube were
buried last month and Harris’ burial is being set by his family.
On Oct. 24, 1943,
a B-25D-1 Mitchell bomber crewed by these airmen departed Oro Bay
Airfield in New Guinea on a bombing run of enemy targets in Rabaul. As
the aircraft neared its target, it was attacked by Japanese fighter
aircraft. Crewmen from other aircraft said they saw the B-25 crash near
a plantation at Kabanga Point. There were no survivors.
In 1946 and 1947,
Australian War Graves search teams recovered some of the crew’s remains
from the crash site. Identifications were not possible at the time and
the remains were ultimately buried at the Manila American Military
Cemetery in the Philippines.
From 1999-2000,
the Joint POW/MIA Accounting Command (JPAC) led a joint U.S. and Papua
New Guinea (P.N.G.) investigation and excavation of a WWII-era crash
site in East New Britain Province. One joint team interviewed
individuals having information on the crash, including an eyewitness
who said he saw the B-25 crash near his village. Another individual
found and buried human remains at the crash site in the mid 1990s. The
team surveyed the site and found aircraft wreckage, human remains and
personal effects. A second joint team excavated the site and recovered
additional human remains and crew-related artifacts from the wreckage
field.
In 2004, an
anthropologist from JPAC’s Central Identification Laboratory (CIL)
exhumed the graves at the Manila American Military Cemetery where he
recovered the remains buried there in the 1940s.
Among dental
records, 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 the
remains.
|