NICKOL, ROBERT ALLEN

Name: Robert Allen Nickol
Rank/Branch: E5/US Army
Unit: Headquarters & Headquarters Troop, 7th Squadron, 17th Cavalry, 17th
Aviation Group, 1st Aviation Brigade, Camp Holloway, Pleiku RV
Date of Birth: 08 July 1951 (Wilkes-Barre PA)
Home City of Record: Bethlehem PA
Date of Loss: 26 October 1971
Country of Loss: South Vietnam/Over Water
Loss Coordinates: 121301N 1091847E (CP165510)
Status (in 1973): Killed/Body Not Recovered
Category: 5
Refno: 1775

Source: Compiled from one or more of the following: raw data from U.S.
Government agency sources, correspondence with POW/MIA families,
published sources, interviews. Updated by the P.O.W. NETWORK in 1998.

Other Personnel In Incident: Michael Lautzenheiser; Mickey Eveland; Thomas
Green; Albert Trudeau; Sanford I. Finger (all missing); Leonard G. Maquiling
(aircraft commander-remains recovered); three other non-crew aboard-bodies
recovered.

REMARKS: CRASHES-4 REMS FND-NOT SUBJS

SYNOPSIS: Before dawn on the morning of October 26, 1971, Mickey Eveland was
awakened by his assistant platoon leader, G.J. Curry and told that he was
needed as crew chief for a resupply flight from Camp Holloway at Pleiku to
Cha Rang Valley and An Son. SP4 Walia, the crew's usual crew chief had to
be present at a promotion board that day, so Mickey Eveland was selected to
fill in for him. Pvt. Green, gunner; WO Albert Trudeau, pilot; CWO Leonard
Maquiling, aircraft commander; SP5 Michael Lautzenheiser, the flight
engineer; were also awakened. The crew flew from the 52nd Aviation
Battalion, "Flying Dragons". Mickey had a hard time waking up, and Curry had
to return to reawaken him. Maquiling, the oldest of the crew, had just
turned 23; Trudeau had just turned 22. Eveland and Green were barely 19.
Mike was 20.

The CH47B, serial #66-19143, call sign Warrior 143, departed Camp Holloway
at 0750 that morning and arrived at An Son at 0900 hours after a stop at Cha
Rang Valley. While at An Son, the aircraft received further orders to fly to
Cam Ranh Bay with a stop at Tuy Hoa. The helicopter arrived at Tuy Hoa at
1115 hours and departed there at 1350 hours. Shortly after departure from
Tuy Hoa, Trudeau radioed that he had 10 people aboard and expected to arrive
at Cam Ranh Bay at 1420 hours. He had taken on 6 passengers for the flight,
Finger, Nickol, and three others. The weather was expected to worsen south
of Tuy Hoa, and the pilot was cautioned to contact Coastal Center for
weather conditions.

The last time anyone saw Warrior 143, it was near Nha Trang, headed south
into bad weather. Search and Rescue was initiated at 1555 hours. Between
October 27 and November 1, debris identified as being from 143 was found
washed ashore on Hon Tre island, just offshore from Nha Trang. The condition
of the debris recovered indicated that the aircraft had struck the water at
high speed. In all, four crew members' remains were found during the search
period. However, there was no sign of Eveland, Trudeau, Nickol, Green,
Finger or Lautzenheiser. An extensive search continued through November 9,
without success. In 1972, the missing crew members were declared Killed in
Action, Body Not Recovered.

An additional recovery attempt was made based on the possible sighting of
the wreckage of the aircraft on October 9, 1974. Two South Vietnamese scuba
divers spent 1 hour and 30 minutes each in an underwater search, but did not
locate the wreckage.

Hon Tre island was definitely Viet Cong territory and their junks plyed the
waters surrounding it at night. Veteran fighter pilots told the
Lautzenheiser family that, in spite of the seemingly dismal facts
surrounding the loss of 123, the presence of so many Viet Cong made it
possible that the crew of the helicopter could have been taken captive.

As the years passed, anguish for the families of the men missing on Warrior
143 only grew as thousands of reports flowed in relating to Americans still
held captive in Southeast Asia. The Vietnamese appear, to many authorities,
to be holding the men against the day the U.S. will pay their promised
reconstruction aid. The U.S. firmly holds that it will not pay. Meanwhile,
nearly 2500 American families wait in limbo, and American heroes die in the
hands of a long-ago enemy, victims of a political war that, for them, will
not end.




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