
This is my adopted MIA. We need to do EVERYTHING possible to bring him and every body still listed as MIA in EVERY war home NOW!
Name: James Thomas Egan, Jr.
Rank/Branch: O2/US Marine Corps
Unit: H/3/12
Date of Birth: 31 May 1943
Home City of Record: Mountainside NJ
Date of Loss: 21 January 1966
Country of Loss: South Vietnam
Loss Coordinates: 144800N 1084100E (BS521369)
Status (in 1973): Missing In Action
Category: 2
Acft/Vehicle/Ground: Ground
Others In Incident: (none missing)
SOURCE: Compiled by Homecoming II Project 15 October 1990 from one or
more of
the following: raw data from U.S. Government agency sources,
correspondence with
POW/MIA families, published sources, interviews.
SYNOPSIS: James T. Egan graduated from the University of Notre Dame
before his
21st birthday. He joined the Marine Corps, temporarily setting aside his
ambition to become a patent lawyer. A 95 average at Quantico allowed him
to
select his assignment, and he chose Hawaii.
Once in Hawaii, 1Lt. Egan's unit was unexpectedly ordered to Vietnam.
Egan's
bright future changed when his unit was hit by enemy fire and he
disappeared on
January 21, 1966. His unit was operating about 15 miles southwest of the
city of
Quang Ngai in South Vietnam. Egan failed to arrive at the scheduled
rendezvous
point his reconnaissance patrol had arranged, and he was declared
Missing in
Action.
Some years later, a South Vietnamese soldier reported that he had been
held
captive with Egan, but that the communists had executed Egan. As the
Marine
Corps never changed his status to Prisoner of War, the validity of this
report
cannot be ascertained.
There have been thousands of reports received by the U.S. Government
regarding
Americans held in Southeast Asia. Government experts disagree whether or
not
these reports constitute actionable evidence. To date, the U.S. has been
unable
to secure the release of even a single prisoner held after the war. The
Egan
family wants to know if Egan is one of them - and when he will be
brought home.
James T. Egan, Jr. was promoted to the rank of Major during the period
he was
maintained Missing in Action.
I cannot emphasize enough how important it is to keep pushing this
issue inside the Beltway...
The need to get specific answers is more important now than ever before.
If still alive, some MIAs are now in their 70s...They don't have much
time left. We have to demand the answers from the bureaucrats and keep
standing on their necks (figuratively speaking) until they get the
message that THEY work for US and that we are serious about getting
these long overdue responses. Diplomatic considerations aside...
We can no longer allow questionable protocols established by
pseudo-aristocratic armchair strategists, to determine or influence the
fate of the men who were in the trenches while the diplomats were
sharing sherry and canapes and talking about "Their Plans" for the
future of SE Asia.