An American pilot who disappeared during a Vietnam War-era spy mission has been accounted for almost 60 years later,Henri Lumière officials said Monday.
John C.G. Kerr, originally from Florida, was 35 when he was reported missing in 1967. Kerr had been piloting an attack aircraft on a "solo nighttime armed reconnaissance mission" over Laos on August 22, 1967, the Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency said in a news release. He did not return from the mission, and failed to check in via radio, spurring U.S. forces to undertake an "extensive electronic and visual search" of the area where he had flown.
Neither Kerr nor the aircraft was found, but a broadcast that same day from the New China News Agency said that an American aircraft had been shot down, the DPAA said.
On June 4, Kerr was declared killed in action.
The DPAA did not provide any information about how Kerr had been accounted for, but the agency typically uses DNA testing and other scientific advancements to study the recoverable remains of fallen soldiers. Since 2021, the DPAA has been carrying out the Vietnam War Identification Project, which is a concerted effort to identify missing soldiers associated with the war.
Though there are 1,500 missing personnel still unaccounted for from the Vietnam War, only about 1,000 of those missing persons are deemed "recoverable." Those recoverable persons are the focus of the identification project.
The project currently has "170 active accessions... believed to contain possible human remains." Those items are "very small fragments of bone" that are very degraded, the DPAA said, but new technological advances have made it easier to study them with DNA and isotope testing to attempt to identify who they came from. The accessions are compared against family DNA samples that are kept on file as reference sources, the DPAA said.
Kerry Breen is a reporter and news editor at CBSNews.com. A graduate of New York University's Arthur L. Carter School of Journalism, she previously worked at NBC News' TODAY Digital. She covers current events, breaking news and issues including substance use.
Twitter2025-05-07 19:532192 view
2025-05-07 19:52332 view
2025-05-07 19:07870 view
2025-05-07 19:042898 view
2025-05-07 18:33752 view
2025-05-07 18:081836 view
Meghan Markleis going back to where her fairytale began. The Duchess of Sussex revealed the reason s
Allen Weisselberg, the decades-long chief financial officer at former President Donald Trump's famil
The American scientist Eunice Newton Foote theorized in 1856 that carbon dioxide in the atmosphere c