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Name: Michael Frank Dean Rank/Branch: E5/US Air Force Unit: 40th Aerospace Rescue/Recovery Squadron, Udorn Airfield, Thailand Date of Birth: 13 September 1946 Home City of Record: LaPuente CA Date of Loss: 30 June 1970 Country of Loss: Laos Loss Coordinates: 165004N 1063104E (XD617617) Status (in 1973): Killed/Body Not Recovered Category: 2 Acft/Vehicle/Ground: HH53C Other Personnel In Incident: Marvin E. Bell; Paul L. Jenkins; John W. Goeglein; Leroy C. Schaneberg (missing); on nearby OV10A: Williams S. Sanders (missing) Source: Compiled by Homecoming II Project 15 March 1991 from one or more of the following: raw data from U.S. Government agency sources, correspondence with POW/MIA families, published sources, interviews. Copyright 1991 Homecoming II Project.

REMARKS: REMAINS RETURNED - SEE BELOW


SYNOPSIS: On June 30, 1970, a crew from the 40th Aerospace Rescue and Recovery 
Squadron at Udorn Airfield, Thailand was dispatched to rescue a downed flight 
crew. Crew aboard the Sikorsky HH53C "Super Jolly" helicopter included the 
pilot, Capt. Leroy C. Schaneberg, crewmembers Major John W. Goeglein, MSgt. Paul 
L. Jenkins, SSgt. Marvin E. Bell, and SSgt. Michael F. Dean. 

The members of the 40th Air R & R were trained for both air and sea recovery, 
and the big "Super Jolly" was equipped to airlift both the crew and aircraft out 
of sticky situations. 

The downed and injured pilot was located in Savannakhet Province, Laos, about 
two kilometers south of Bang Tang. The HH53C penetrated the area, known to be 
hostile, in an attempt to rescue the pilot, but was forced away by hostile 
ground fire. A second attempt was made, but the helicopter was hit by hostile 
fire, caught on fire, went out of control and crashed. The Air Force states it 
received evidence on July 4, 1970, that the crew was dead, but that evidence is 
not specifically described, and no remains identifiable as Bell, Dean, Goeglein, 
Schaneberg, or Jenkins have been recovered. Schaneberg received the Air Force 
Cross for extraordinary heroism as the aircraft commander on this rescue 
mission. 

On the same day, Capt. Williams S. Sanders was flying an OV10A Bronco southeast 
of Khe Sanh at a point where Laos veers north to intrude on South Vietnam. His 
aircraft was shot down just inside Laos, not far from the location of the downed 
helicopter. The Bronco was generally used for marking targets, armed 
reconnaissance and forward air control, so the nature of Capt. Sanders' mission 
and its precise relation to the mission of the Super Jolly from Udorn is 
unknown. The crew of the helicopter was numerically listed missing before the 
OV10, so it is does not seem likely that the helicopter was assisting the 
observation aircraft, but as no other aircraft is missing on that day in that 
area, either the downed pilot was Sanders or the pilot was rescued by other 
means. 

Unfortunately, for families of men missing in Laos, information is difficult to 
obtain. Twenty and twenty-five year old records remain classified and details 
obscured. Much of this information was classified to distort American 
involvement in a now well known "secret" war in Laos. 

Since the war's end in 1973, thousands of reports have been received by the U.S. 
Government regarding Americans still in captivity in Southeast Asia. Many of the 
reports involve Americans in Laos, where nearly 600 Americans went missing, and 
none released despite public statements by the Pathet Lao that "tens of tens" of 
Americans were being held there. 

Henry Kissinger predicted, in the 50's, that future "limited political 
engagements" would result, unfortunately, in nonrecoverable prisoners of war. We 
have seen this prediction fulfilled in Korea and Vietnam, where thousands of men 
and women remain missing, and where ample evidence exists that many of them 
(from BOTH wars) are still alive today. 

For Americans, the "unfortunate" abandonment of military personnel is not 
acceptable, and the policy that allows it must be changed before another 
generation is left behind in some faraway war. 

Remains were returned 03/95 as "120 bone fragments which cannot be degregated, fragments too small for DNA testing as it would 'destroy the chips', a dental prostheses, a St. Christopher's medal, coins, buttons, etc. They say the fragments represent a minimum of one person, a maximum of two people, yet they feel this is a full accounting of five men who served our government..."

FROM a letter to the Editor, Rochelle News Leader, March 30, 1995, by Dawn Wyatt, niece of Leroy C. Schaneberg.

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