Robert Charles "Chuck" O'Hara
This page is Dedicated to the Robert Charles "Chuck" O'Hara !!
He is my POW/MIA that I Adopted and may God
Bless Him !!
Other Personnel In Incident: Charles I. Stanley; Ronald D. Briggs; David E. Padgett; Eugene F. Christiansen; Donald E. Parsons (all missing)
Source: Compiled by Homecoming II Project 15 June 1990 from one or more of the following: raw data from U.S. Government agency sources, correspondence with POW/MIA families, published sources, interviews.
REMARKS:
SYNOPSIS: On February 6, 1969, CW2 Charles I. Stanley, pilot; 1Lt. David E.
Padgett, aircraft commander; SP5 Robert C. O'Hara, crew chief; PFC Eugene F.
Christiansen, door gunner; LtCol. Donald E. Parsons, 1Lt. Ronald D. Briggs,
and
Maj. Vu Vanh Phao, ARVN, all passengers, were aboard a UH1H (serial
#67-17499)
on a resupply mission in Quang Tri Province, South Vietnam.
While in route from Landing Zone Vandergrift to LZ Tornado, 1Lt. Padget
contacted the LZ Tornado radio operator at about 1100 hours and stated that
due
to poor weather conditions and poor visibility, the flight was returning to
LZ
Vandergrift.
At that time, the radio operator at LZ Tornado could hear the helicopter
northeast of his location, which sounded as if it were heading in a
northerly
direction. When the aircraft failed to return to LZ Vandergrift, a
coordinated
search and rescue operation was initiated and continued for seven
consecutive
days, finding nothing.
However, on the morning of February 7, Crown, an airborne control aircraft,
reported receiving radio beeper signals several times from the general
vicinity
of where Lt. Padgett's aircraft was last reported.
The beeper signals were
estimated to emanate from that general direction. The source of the signals
was
never determined.
The area in which the aircraft was estimated to go down has been dubbed
"Antenna
Valley" and is located west of Cam Lo and on the backside of Camp Carrol.
The
area was occupied by NVA regulars, and was never cleared.
On-site search was
not
possible at that time.
On September 4, 1969, an ARVN source reported that in August he had seen LTC
Parsons, Maj. Phao, LT Briggs, and four other unidentified American POWs in
a
hospital in Laos.
The U.S. Army determined that the four unidentified
Americans
could possibly be Christiansen, Stanley, Padgett and O'Hara.
On July 5, 1972, an NVA rallier reported seeing two caucasian POWs in the
vicinity of a T-35 commo-liaison station on the 499th infiltration corridor
in
Laos.
The two POWs were being taken to North Vietnam.
This information was
tentatively correlated to LT Padgett and PCF Christiansen.
In September 1970, LTC Parson's wife and friends identified him in a North
Vietnamese film of a protestant service in a POW environment.
CW2 Stanley's
mother made a tentative identification of her son in the same film.
In December 1979, an alleged "gun-runner", Sean O'Toolis reported that he
had
the fingerprints of Robert O'Hara, and that O'Hara was at that time being
held
south of Hanoi near Bong Song.
O'Toolis' information was summarily dismissed
by
the U.S. Government and he was thoroughly discredited, thus it is not clear
how
much credence can be given to his information.
The reports relating to the crew of the UH1H that went down on February 6,
1969
are typical of the over 10,000 reports received by the U.S. Government
relating
to Americans prisoner, missing or unaccounted for in Southeast Asia.
After
reviewing "several million documents" and conducting "over 250,000
interviews"
the USG has been unable to state categorically that Americans are still
alive.
Many authorities, however, including a former Director of Defense
Intelligence
Agency, have reluctantly concluded that there are many Americans still held
against their will in Southeast Asia.
Families who receive these reports are especially tortured.
With no means to
prove or disprove them, the tormen is indescribable.
When they turn to their
government, they are usually met with the "mindset to debunk" described by
one
high official in Congressional hearings.
When they approach Vietnam, they
are
told the person they seek is unknown to them.
Yet the reports continue to
flow
in, month after month, year after year.
And year after year, families wait.
And year after year, American servicemen wait -- wondering if their country will ever bring them home.