PLEASE TAKE TIME TO SAY A PRAYER FOR THESE HEROS AND THEIR FAMLIES, THEN PASS THIS ON THAT OTHERS MIGHT HONOR THEM

Marines Missing in Action from WWII Identified
            The Department of Defense POW/Missing Personnel Office (DPMO)  announced today that the remains of seven servicemen, missing in action from  World War II, have been identified and are being buried with full military  honors.              
Marine Corps 1st Lt. Laverne A. Lallathin of Raymond, Wash.; 2nd  Lt. Dwight D. Ekstam of Moline, Ill.; 2nd Lt. Walter B. Vincent, Jr. of Tulsa,  Okla.; Tech. Sgt. James A. Sisney of Redwood City, Calif.; Cpl. Wayne R.  Erickson of Minneapolis; Cpl. John D. Yeager of Pittsburgh, Pa.; and Pfc. John  A. Donovan of Plymouth, Mich., will be buried as a group, in a single casket  representing the crew, on Oct. 4, in Arlington National Cemetery.
Six of the  Marines were identified and buried as individuals previously this year.   Lallathin, also individually identified, will be interred individually at  Arlington on the same day as the group interment.           
On April 22, 1944, the Marines were aboard a PBJ-1 aircraft that  failed to return from a night training mission over the island of Espiritu  Santo, in what is known today as Vanuatu.  None of the seven crew members were  recovered at that time, and in 1945 they were officially presumed  deceased.             
In 1994, a group of private citizens notified the U.S. that  aircraft wreckage had been found on the island of Espiritu Santo.  Human remains  were recovered from the site at that time and turned over to the Department of  Defense.           
In 1999, a Joint POW/MIA Accounting Command (JPAC) survey team  traveled to the location.  The crash site was located at an elevation of 2,600  ft., in extremely rugged terrain, and the team determined that specialized  mountain training would be necessary to safely complete a recovery mission.   From 2000 to 2011, multiple JPAC recovery teams excavated the site and recovered  human remains, aircraft parts and military equipment.            
To identify the remains, scientists from JPAC and the Armed  Forces DNA Identification Laboratory (AFDIL) evaluated circumstantial evidence  and mitochondrial DNA -- which matched that of the Marines’ family members.            
Today, more than 73,000 Americans remain unaccounted-for from the  conflict.

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