2
Airmen Missing in Action from Korean War are
Identified
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The Department of
Defense POW/Missing Personnel Office announced today
that the remains of two U.S. servicemen, missing in
action from the Korean War, have been identified and
are being returned to their families for burial with
full military honors.
They are Col. Douglas H. Hatfield, of
Shenandoah, Va., and Capt. Richard H. Simpson, of
Fairhaven, Mich., both U.S. Air Force. Funeral dates
have not been set by the families.
On April 12, 1951, Hatfield and
Simpson were two of eleven crewmembers on a B-29
Superfortress that left Kadena Air Base, Japan, to
bomb targets in the area of Sinuiju, North
Korea. Enemy MiG-15 fighters attacked the B-29, but
before it crashed, three crewmembers were able to
bail out. They were captured and two of them were
later released in 1954 to U.S. military control
during Operation "Big Switch." The third crewmember
died in captivity. He and the eight remaining
crewmembers were not recovered.
In 1993, the North Korean government
turned over to the United Nations Command 31 boxes
containing the remains of U.S. servicemen listed as
unaccounted-
B-29.
In 2000, a joint U.S./Democratic
People's Republic of Korea (D.P.R.K.) team, led by
the Joint POW/MIA Accounting Command (JPAC)
excavated an infantry fighting position in Kujang
County where they recovered remains which included
those of Hatfield and Simpson.
Among other
forensic identification tools and circumstantial
evidence, scientists from JPAC and the Armed Forces
DNA Identification Laboratory also used
mitochondrial DNA and dental comparisons in the
identification of the remains recovered in 2000.
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