SANSONE, DOMINICK

Remains Returned 17 July 1984

Name: Dominick Sansone
Rank/Branch: E7/US Army
Unit:
Date of Birth: 03 July 1930
Home City of Record: New York NY
Date of Loss: 10 December 1964
Country of Loss: South Vietnam
Loss Coordinates: 160720N 1081748E (BT105843)
Status (in 1983): Killed/Body Not Recovered
Category: 4
Aircraft/Vehicle/Ground: C123
Refno: 0046

Other Personnel in Incident: Woodrow W. Vaden (missing)

Source: Compiled by Homecoming II Project 01 September 1990 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: REMS POSS MIX W/VMS & BURIED - J

SYNOPSIS: During the mid-1960's most Americans were scarcely aware that the
U.S. was beginning military activity in Southeast Asia. The U.S. military
role at that time was that of advisors to the South Vietnamese military; an
effort made to help the Vietnamese protect their homeland from communism.

Air Force MAJ Woodrow W. Vaden was an American member of a Vietnamese flight
crew onboard a Fairchild C123 "Provider." The Provider, particularly in
camoflage paint with mottled topside and light bottomside, resembled an
arched-back whale suspended from the bottom midpoint of huge dorsal wings.
Like other transports, the Provider proved its versatility during the
Vietnam war serving as transport, attack aircraft, and later as part of the
controversial Project Ranch Hand which sprayed pesticides and herbicides
over Vietnam, including Agent Orange.

Another American onboard the aircraft was U.S. Army paratrooper SFC Dominick
Sansone. The two Americans were flying with a group of South Vietnamese
airmen on December 10, 1964 when the aircraft was shot down just east of Da
Nang, killing all aboard.

For reasons now obscure, South Vietnamese authorities took possession of all
recovered remains and took them to Saigon for burial in a military cemetery.
U.S. authorities believed that the remains of one or both Americans were
among those recovered. Sources say several unsuccessful attempts were made
by the U.S. to locate and recover them from the cemetery during the war.
Both men were listed Killed in Action/Body Not Recovered.

In 1983, Vietnam discovered Sansone's remains and turned them over to the
United States. The positive identification of the remains was announced the
following year. Vietnam's Prime Minister Pham Van Dong, in a 1984 interview
with Newsweek, used the case to illustrate the many practical difficulties
in the search for America's missing.

"Even the most sophisticated U.S. computer that has documented the MIAs
fails to be of help," he said. "For example, U.S. information given to us
listed paratrooper Dominic Sansone...as MIA over Danang in 1964, and we
found his remains buried in a cemetery outside of Ho Chi Minh City."

U.S. authorities knew that the Vietnamese were moving bodies from the
cemetery in question but did not alert them to the probability that American
remains were there. Why would the U.S. not report the location of Sansone's
remains?

Many critics point to the Sansone case as an example of slipshod handling of
the POW/MIA accounting effort. If the U.S. had been forthcoming with the
knowledge on file concerning Sansone's body, perhaps his family would not
have had to wait nearly 20 years for his return.

Even more curious is U.S. handling of the live POW issue. It is a rare news
report that mentions any discussion between the U.S. and Vietnam for live
American POWs in Southeast Asia, a startling oversight in light of well over
a thousand first hand, live-sighting reports received by the U.S. concerning
missing Americans.

Many authorities who have examined the largely-classified information
relating to Americans missing in Southeast Asia believe that hundreds are
still alive in captivity today. From the manner in which their return has
been handled, it sometimes seems that the U.S. Government doesn't really
want them home.

Meanwhile, the fates of hundreds of men like Woodrow W. Vaden remain
uncertain.

Dominick Sansone is buried in Pine Lawn National Cemetery.

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02/2020

https://dpaa.secure.force.com/dpaaProfile?id=a0Jt000000ukCp8EA

SFC DOMINICK SANSONE

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On July 27, 1984, the Central Identification Lab–Hawaii (CILHI, now DPAA) identified the remains of Sergeant First Class Dominick Sansone, missing from the Vietnam War.

Sergeant First Class Sansone entered the U.S. Army from New York and served with the 1st Special Forces Group. On December 10, 1964, he was aboard a C-123 Provider that took off from Da Nang Airfield carrying Vietnamese paratroopers on a training mission over South Vietnam. The aircraft crashed shortly after takeoff and SFC Sansone was killed in the incident. Investigators recovered his remains at the crash site; however, they were initially buried in a Vietnamese cemetery in Saigon shortly thereafter, and could not be located for disinterment during subsequent investigations. In July 1984, the Vietnamese government repatriated SFC Sansone's remains to American authorities. 

Sergeant First Class Sansone 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.