WILLIAM ROBERT FINN
CAPT - Air Force - Reserve
Rank/Branch: O2/US Air Force
30 year old Single, Caucasian,
Male
Born on Aug 15, 1947
Date of Birth: 16 August 1947
From METAIRIE, LOUISIANA
His tour of duty began on Dec
24, 1971
Casualty was on Jun 29, 1978
Date of Loss: 24 December 1971
Country of Loss: Laos
Loss Coordinates: 144200N 1064700E
(YB477233)
Status (in 1973): Missing in
Action
FIXED WING - CREW
AIR LOSS, CRASH ON LAND
Aircraft/Vehicle/Ground: OV10A
Body was not recovered
Refno: 1788
Religion
ROMAN CATHOLIC
Panel 02W - - Line 91
Other Personnel in Incident:
Timothy M. Tucker (missing)
Category: 3
Source: Compiled
by Homecoming II Project with the assistance of Task Force
Omega from one or more of the
following: raw data from U.S. Government agency
sources, correspondence with
POW/MIA families, published sources,
interviews: 01 January 1990.
Updated by the P.O.W. NETWORK 1998.
REMARKS:
SYNOPSIS:The
OV10 Bronco was among the aircraft most feared by the Viet
Cong and NVA forces, because
whenever the Bronco appeared overhead, an air
strike seemed certain to follow.
Although the glassed-in cabin could become
uncomfortably warm, it provided
splendid visibility. The two-man crew had
armor protection and could use
machine guns and bombs to attack, as well as
rockets to mark targets for
fighter bombers. This versatility enabled the
plane to fly armed reconnaissance
missions, in addition to serving as
vehicle for forward air controllers.
1Lt. Timothy M. Tucker was the
pilot and 1Lt. William R. Finn the co-pilot
of an OV10 Bronco assigned a
mission over Laos on Christmas Eve, 1971. Their
mission took them over Attopeu
Province, the extreme southeast province of
Laos.
At a point about 12 miles south
of the city of Attopeu, the Bronco was lost,
and Tucker and Finn became Missing
in Action. Upon subsequent evaluation of
their cases, it was thought
doubtful that the enemy knew either of their
fates.
In 1973, the prisoners of war
held in Vietnam were released. Laos was not
part of the Paris agreement
which ended American involvement in Indochina.
No prisoners held by the Lao
were ever released. Nearly 600 Americans were
left behind, forgotten.
In 1975, refugees fled Southeast
Asia and brought with them stories of
Americans still held prisoner.
The reports continued to flow in as the years
passed. By 1990, nearly 10,000
reports had been received. Some sources have
passed multiple polygraph tests,
but the U.S. Government still insists that
proof is not available, yet
maintains most of the reports in classified
status. One
such report describes William R. Finn's capture, and names him
by name. This report has never
been confirmed, as far as public scrutiny can
determine.
Meanwhile, the Lao voice dismay
about the large numbers of their people that
were killed and the fact that
much of their once beautiful homeland now is
cratered like the moon from
bombs dropped by American planes. They seem to
want acknowledgement that, in
bombing enemy sanctuaries in Laos, we also did
great harm to the Lao people.
We are haunted by the secret
war we conducted in Laos through the lives of
the Americans we left behind.
Some of them may still be alive. What must
they be thinking of us?
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