DALTON, RANDALL DAVID
Remains Returned 2011
Name: Randall David Dalton
Rank/Branch: E4/US Army
Unit: Troop A, 3rd Squadron, 17th Cavalry (Air Cavalry), 12th Aviation Group
Date of Birth: 05 December 1950 (Alton IL)
Home City of Record: Collinsville IL
Date of Loss: 24 July 1971
Country of Loss: Cambodia
Loss Coordinates: 120327N 1063522E (XU730333)
Status (in 1973): Killed/Body Not Recovered
Category: 2
Aircraft/Vehicle/Ground: OH6A
Refno: 1762
Other Personnel in Incident: Gregory A. Antunano (missing); Timothy G.
Wiltrout (rescued)
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 2020.
REMARKS:
SYNOPSIS: The 3rd Squadron, 17th Cavalry was part of the 12th Aviation Group
during its service in Vietnam. It was responsible for air cavalry support in
the western part of III Corps Tactical Zone. In late 1970 it was placed
under the operational control of the 1st Cavalry Division to form a highly
successful ad hoc air cavalry brigade.
On July 24, 1971, WO1 Timothy G. Wiltrout, pilot; Sgt. Gregory A. Antunano,
observer; and SP4 Randall D. Dalton, door gunner; were crew members on an
OH6A "Loach" observation helicopter (serial #17-257) which was shot down by
enemy fire while on a reconnaissance mission in Cambodia. The aircraft went
down about 5 miles inside Cambodia, in Kracheh Province, just a few miles
southeast of the city of Snuol.
When rescuers arrived at the crash site, they found the pilot outside the
downed aircraft. He suffered a broken leg in the incident, but was otherwise
unhurt. The other two crew members were still strapped in their seats inside
the wreckage. Both were taken out of the helicopter and at that time, SP4
Dalton was still alive. Sgt. Antunano was believed to be dead.
A short time later, SP4 Dalton stopped breathing. Efforts to revive him were
unsuccessful. The medic checked both Dalton and Antunano several times, and
told other rescuers that they were dead.
As enemy soldiers began moving into the area, search and rescue aircraft
evacuated the rescue team and Wiltrout, the pilot. Because of enemy
presence, no attempt was made to extract the two bodies. They were left
lying near the downed helicopter.
The following day, several SAR aircraft returned to the location in an
attempt to recover Antunano and Dalton, but noted that the aircraft had been
stripped and moved several feet. Personal effects of the crew, such as their
helmets, weapons and the aircraft radio had also been removed. Sgt. Antunano
and SP4 Dalton's bodies were gone. A search of the area from the air did not
reveal fresh graves or any sign of the two men.
Antunano and Dalton's bodies were never found. They are listed with honor
among the missing because their remains are still on enemy soil. For other
missing Americans, simple resolution is not possible. Some were in radio
contact with would-be rescuers - some simply did not return from missions.
Others were known prisoners who disappeared from prison systems and were not
released at the end of the war.
"Several million documents" and 250,000 interviews have convinced many
officials that Americans were left behind in Vietnam and that some remain
alive today. Some number those alive in the hundreds. While Dalton and
Antunano may not be among them, if there is even one American left alive, we
must do everything possible to bring him home.
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http://www.military.com/news/article/soldier-lost-in-vietnam-coming-home-for-burial.html?ESRC=eb.nl
Soldier Lost in Vietnam Coming Home for Burial
July 20, 2011
St.
Louis Post-Dispatch
GLEN
CARBON -- There was almost no question that Randy Dalton had died
serving his country during
the Vietnam War. He was in a helicopter that
crashed, and a medic said he couldn't revive Dalton. Enemy
fire, though,
forced rescuers to leave his body behind.
The
date was July 24, 1971. Now, after years of searches and efforts to
secure a positive identification,
the remains of Dalton are finally on
their way back home to the St. Louis area.
With
his three sisters looking on, Dalton will be buried next to his parents
in a Glen Carbon cemetery
on Sunday -- the 40th anniversary of his
death.
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https://dpaa.secure.force.com/dpaaProfile?id=a0Jt000000oCOlFEAW
01/2020
On July 21, 2011, the Defense POW/Missing Person Office (DPMO,
now DPAA) announced that the remains of Specialist 4 Randall
David Dalton, missing from the Vietnam War, had been identified.
Specialist 4 Dalton, who joined the U.S. Army from Illinois,
served with the 3rd Squadron, 17th Cavalry Regiment. On July 24,
1971, he was the door gunner on an OH-6A Cayuse Helicopter with
a crew of three that was struck by ground fire and crashed in
the Kracheh Province of Cambodia. Spec 4 Dalton and another crew
member died in the crash. A search and rescue team managed to
evacuate the pilot despite enemy activity in the area, but when
the team returned the next day to recover the bodies of the
other two crew members, they had disappeared. In 1989, the
Socialist Republic of Vietnam returned three boxes of human
remains to U.S. custody. However, the forensic technology
available at the time was not capable of identifying the
remains. In 2011, using modern forensic and DNA analysis,
investigators were able to identify Spec 4 Dalton's remains
among those returned.
Army Specialist 4 Dalton is memorialized on the Courts of the
Missing at the National Memorial Cemetery of the Missing.
If you are a family member of this serviceman, you may contact your casualty office representative to learn more about your service member.