BORTON, ROBERT CURTIS JR.
FAMILY REJECTS ID OF 29 MAR 95

Name:  Robert Curtis Borton, Jr.
Rank/Branch: E2/US Marines
Unit: 1st Platoon, Company K, 3rd Battalion, 1st Marine Division
Date of Birth: 24 June 1946
Home City of Record: Benton Harbor MI
Date of Loss: 28 August 1966
Country of Loss: South Vietnam
Loss Coordinates: 155800N 1081500E (BT061673)
Status (in 1973): Missing in Action
Category: 2
Acft/Vehicle/Ground: ground
Refno: 0439

Other Personnel in Incident: John E. Bodenschatz Jr.; Robert L. Babula;
Dennis R. Carter (all 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. Updated by the P.O.W.
NETWORK 2020.

REMARKS:

SYNOPSIS: PFC Robert L. Babula, PFC Robert C. Borton Jr., PFC John E.
Bodenschatz Jr., and PFC Dennis R. Carter were members of 1st Platoon,
Company K, 3rd Battalion, 1st Marines. On 28 August 1966, the four were
assigned as a fire team ambush with instructions to establish an ambush site
approximately 500 meters to the south of their platoon patrol base. This
specific location is in Hoa Hai village within grid square BT 0667.

The fire team departed at 3:00 a.m. on August 28, and were given
instructions for use of the pyrotechnics they were carrying as signaling
devices. They were further instructed to relocate in the same general area
or return to their platoon patrol base in the event their ambush site was
compromised, and finally to return no later than 9:00 a.m. that morning.

When the fire team failed to return as scheduled, an immediate search of the
area was conducted by Company K with negative results. During the period of
August 29-31, the Battalion made a dovetailed search of the entire area
covering all possible routes of egress in the event the team members had
been captured.

Indigenous personnel in the area were questioned, but no evidence was
uncovered which gave any clues. Villagers were questioned and a search of
the area continued. On September 4, Company K discovered part of an American
wrist watch and PFC Bodenschatz' two identification tags in the vicinity of
BT 061673. The search was intensified in that area, including the use of
heavy engineer equipment in an effort to locate graves, but no further trace
was found.

On September 13, the Battalion cordoned off grid squares BT 0567, 0667,
0566, 0666 and all inhabitants were assembled, screened, and interrogated by
an ARVN interrogation team from Hoa Vang District Headquarters. Three Viet
Cong suspects were retained for further questioning, however, no additional
information was obtained concerning the four Marines.

The Battalion commander's final determination was that the four Marines were
probably captured.

In 1975, information was declassified that indicated that since the fire
team's disappearance, Marine headquarters had received two reports sighting
three to four Americans being displayed in villages south of the area in
which the fire team disappeared.

A Christmas card received by Company K/3/1 1st Marine Division, sent by
Babula's mother and sister, stated that they had recently received news that
Babula was a prisoner of war. None of the four, however, returned in the
general prisoner release in 1973.

Since the war ended, the Defense Department has received over 10,000 reports
relating to the men still unaccounted for in Southeast Asia, yet concludes
that no actionable evidence has been received that would indicate Americans
are still alive in Southeast Asia. A recent Senate investigation indicates
that most of these reports were dismissed without just cause, and that there
is every indication that Americans remained in captivity far after the war
ended, and may be alive today.

The fate of the four Marines on the fire team on 28 August 1966 remains
uncertain. What is clear, however, is that it's time we learned the truth
about our missing and brought them home.

-------------------------------

From - Wed Sep 16 19:32:36 1998
Please feel free to email me with any questions about Robert C. Borton USMC
still MIA until proven otherwise.

Little Sister,
Diane Borton/Hoeft

martha.d.hoeft@boeing.com

 Subject:      RE: Re: Robert Curtis Borton Jr,

       We absolutely did not accept his remains.  They went to my
 sisters and brother and even my nieces and nephews trying to get them
 to accept the so called remains which by the way was only a handful of
 teeth.  But no one in our family would accept this as proof.  We were
 all definitely united on this.  As far as I know the teeth are still
 sitting in a warehouse at Edwards Air Force base.  They told us that
 all that was in the gravesite were these teeth.  When I asked them
 where the rest of the remains were they tried to tell us that grave
 robbers stole the rest.  I said now wait a minute let me get this
 straight... These grave robbers took the rest of the remains after
 taking time to pull the teeth from the jawbone and place them back in
 the grave.  Some how I don't quite buy this story.  Call me cynical or
 dim if you will but this story doesn't hold water much less proof of
 Curt's demise.

       They are in such a rush to close all cases of anyone who would
 dare to contradict them.  Curt is still MIA and will be until there is
 more conclusive evidence to the contrary.

       I am sorry if the tone of this is angry or negative but their
 audacity of trying to get people to accept a handful of teeth as
 evidence makes me so angry that they think that the American people
 are that stupid or naive.

                       Diane
 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

01/2020

https://dpaa.secure.force.com/dpaaProfile?id=a0Jt000000ukCnvEAE

GYSGT ROBERT CURTIS BORTON JR.

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On March 29, 1995, Joint Task Force-Full Accounting (JTF-FA, now DPAA) identified the remains of Gunnery Sergeant Robert Curtis Borton Jr., missing from the Vietnam War.

Gunnery Sergeant Borton, who entered the U.S. Marine Corps from Michigan, served with Company K, 3rd Battalion, 1st Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division. On August 28, 1968, he was on a fire team that departed a base in Quang Nam Province to establish an offensive position near Hoa Hai Village, Vietnam. During the mission, the fire team was ambushed and GySgt Borton was killed, but his body could not be recovered at the time. In 1993, a joint U.S./Vietnamese investigative team excavated a suspected grave site in Quang Nam Province and recovered a set of human remains. Forensic analysts later identified these remains as those of GySgt Borton.
 
Gunnery Sergeant Borton is memorialized on the Courts of the Missing at the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific. 

If you are a family member of this serviceman, you may contact your casualty office representative to learn more about your service member.