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Soldier Missing In
Action From Korean War Is Identified
The Department of Defense POW/Missing
Personnel Office announced today that the remains of
a U.S. serviceman, missing from the Korean War, have
been identified.
He is Sgt. Agostino Di Rienzo, U.S.
Army, of East Boston, Mass.
Representatives from the Army met
with Di Rienzo's next-of-kin to explain the recovery
and identification process on behalf of the
Secretary of the Army.
Di Rienzo was assigned to Company L,
3rd Battalion, 8th Cavalry
Regiment, 1st Cavalry Division then
occupying a defensive position near Unsan, North
Korea, in an area known as the "Camel's Head." On
Nov. 1, 1950, parts of two Chinese Communist Forces
divisions struck the 1st Cavalry
Division's lines, collapsing the perimeter and
forcing a withdrawal. In the process, the 3rd
Battalion was surrounded and effectively ceased to
exist as a fighting unit. Di Rienzo was one of the
more than 350 servicemen unaccounted-
In 2002, a joint U.S.-Democratic
People's Republic of North Korea team, led by the
Joint POW/MIA Accounting Command (JPAC), excavated a
burial site south of Unsan near the nose of the
"Camel's Head" formed by the joining of the Nammyon
and Kuryong rivers. The team recovered human
remains.
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.
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