HOLT, ROBERT ALAN
Remains Identified 06/04/99
Name: Robert Alan Holt
Branch/Rank: United States Marine Corps/O3
Unit: VMFA 542 MAG 11
Date of Birth: 13 June 1942
Home City of Record: READING MA
Date of Loss: 19 September 1968
Country of Loss: North Vietnam
Loss Coordinates: 171327 North 1064243 East
Status (in 1973): Killed In Action/Body Not Recovered
Category: 2
Aircraft/Vehicle/Ground: F4B #152232
Missions:
Other Personnel in Incident: John Lavoo, KIA/BNR
Refno: 1281
Source: Compiled by P.O.W. NETWORK from one or more of the following: raw
data from U.S. Government agency sources, correspondence with POW/MIA
families, published sources, interviews and CACCF = Combined Action
Combat Casualty File.
REMARKS:
CACCF/CRASH SOUTH VIETNAM/AIRCREW/3 YRS United States Marine Corps/QUANG
TRI
No further information available at this time.
---------------------------
Defense POW/MIA Weekly Update
June 4, 1999
TWO SERVICEMEN IDENTIFIED
The remains of two American servicemen previously unaccounted-for from the
war in Southeast Asia have been identified and are being returned to their
families for burial in the United States.
They are identified as Capt. Robert A. Holt, USMC, Reading, Mass.; and Capt.
John A. Lavoo, USMC, Pueblo, Colo.
On Sept. 19, 1968, Holt and Lavoo were flying their F-4B Phantom on a combat
mission over Quang Binh Province, North Vietnam. After they launched their
rockets at the target, their aircraft appeared to pitch very slightly
without breaking its dive. It then pulled suddenly to the right 90
degrees, then back 45 degrees. It crashed amid a large explosion. No
parachutes were observed and no beepers were heard by their wingman.
The wingman and another tactical control aircraft made low passes over the
wreckage, but saw no evidence that the crew survived. An additional
electronic search yielded no indication of survivors. The hostile ground
threat precluded any search and rescue efforts.
In July 1992, a joint U. S./Vietnamese team, led by the Joint Task Force-Ful
l Accounting, visited the suspected area of the crash and interviewed
several informants with firsthand knowledge of the site. One of the
informants turne d over remains they said were taken from the site. The team
also examined some aircraft wreckage in the possession of the villagers.
Another joint team reinterviewed one of the informants in August 1993, while
another team in January 1994 surveyed the site again and recommended it for
excavation. Then in May 1994, excavation team members recovered numerous
pilot-related items as well as human remains.
A fifth team continued the excavation in June and July 1994 and recovered
additional remains and pilot-related artifacts. A sixth team completed the
excavation in August and September 1994, recovering some artifacts, but no
remains.
Anthropological analysis of the remains and other evidence by the U. S. Army
Central Identification Laboratory, Hawaii confirmed the identification of
both of these servicemen. With the accounting of these two, there are now
2,061 Americans unaccounted-for from the Vietnam War. Since the release of
American POWs in 1973, 522 MIAs from Southeast Asia have been accounted-for
and returned to their families for burial with full military honors.
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