Pannabecker, David Eric, Capt

POW/MIA
 
 Service Photo   Service Details
75 kb
View Shadow Box View Printable Shadow Box View Time Line
Last Rank
Captain
Last Primary AFSC/MOS
1115A-Pilot
Last AFSC Group
Aircrew
Primary Unit
1970-1972, 3rd Air Rescue Group
Service Years
1961 - 1972
Officer srcset=
Captain

 Current Photo   Personal Details 

32 kb


Home State
Pennsylvania
Pennsylvania
Year of Birth
1939
 
This Military Service Page was created/owned by A3C Michael S. Bell (Unit Historian) to remember Pannabecker, David Eric (Jolly 23), Capt.

If you knew or served with this Airman and have additional information or photos to support this Page, please leave a message for the Page Administrator(s) HERE.
 
Contact Info
Home Town
Womelsdorf
Last Address
Nakhom Phanom RTAFB
MIA Date
Mar 27, 1972
 
Cause
MIA-Finding of Death
Reason
Air Loss, Crash - Land
Location
Cambodia
Conflict
Vietnam War
Memorial Coordinates
02W 120

 Official Badges 




 Unofficial Badges 




 Military Associations and Other Affiliations
Vietnam Veterans MemorialThe National Gold Star Family Registry
  2012, Vietnam Veterans Memorial - Assoc. Page
  2023, The National Gold Star Family Registry


 Additional Information
Last Known Activity:

On 27 March 1972, Capt. David E. Pannabecker, pilot; Capt. Richard E. Dreher, co-pilot; Sgt. James Manor, flight Engineer; Sgt. Raymond J. Crow, Jr., pararescueman; and A1C Raymond A. Wagner, pararescueman/recovery specialist; comprised the crew of a HH53C Super Jolly Green Giant Serial # 68-10359 (Call Sign Jolly 23) on an morning escort mission into Cambodia. The aircraft departed Nakhom Phanom Airbase at 0830 hours as the #2 aircraft in a flight of two.
 

Following aerial refueling over southern Thailand, the two Super Jolly's rendezvoused with the rest of the flight. Upon sighting the aircraft to be escorted, Lead radioed "Tally Ho," the signal acknowledging he had visual contact with the other aircraft. When there was no response from Capt. Pannabecker's helicopter, Lead attempted to locate him visually. After completing a 180-degree turn, Lead reported seeing a column of black smoke rising from the dense jungle 5 miles away. The location of the crash is 20 kilometers east of Siem Pang, 7 kilometers northeast of Chan Tuy and 15 meters north of Kiribongsa villages, Stoeng Treng Province, Cambodia. It was also 3 miles north of the O Smang River, 11 miles east of the Tonle Kong River, 4 miles northeast of Highway 194 and 78 miles southwest of the tri-border region where South Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia meet. Small hamlets and villages were scattered throughout the area along with small clearings, rice fields and patches of bamboo.
 

A search and rescue/recovery (SAR) pararescue team from the Lead helicopter was lowered to the ground at the crash site to check for survivors. During the over three hours the team spent on the ground, they could not approach near enough to the burning wreckage to determine if there were crew members trapped inside the aircraft due to the intense heat. However, the team searched the surrounding area and reported finding two partially deployed parachutes, but no trace of the men who had used them, near the burning helicopter.
 

Later that afternoon, a second rescue team was deployed in the immediate area of the crash. They reported the fire was out and the aircraft had been completely destroyed. They also reported no remains were visible. There were no further attempts to locate or recover any crewmen from the downed Super Jolly Green due to the presence of hostile forces who had moved into the area. At the time the formal search effort was terminated, Richard Dreher, David Pannabecker, Raymond Wagner, James Manor and Raymond Crow were all declared Killed in Action/Body Not Recovered even though it was never determined if they all actually died in the crash.
 

The Americans missing in Cambodia pose a special problem. The US has never recognized the Cambodian government, nor has it negotiated for the Americans who were captured, or otherwise unaccounted for, in that country. It is generally believed by the US government that any POWs who were held in Cambodia after the end of our country's involvement in Southeast Asia probably perished in the genocide committed by Pol Pot in the mid 1970's.
 

In 1988, the Cambodian government announced it had the remains of a number of American servicemen it wished to return to the United States. The US did not respond officially because there is no diplomatic relations between our countries. Several US Congressmen have tried to intervene in the deadlock in order to recover the remains on behalf of the men's families. Cambodia, however, prefers to hold out for a government-to-government repatriation of the remains.
 

In December 1993, a US team under the auspices of the Joint task Force for Full Accounting (JTFFA) investigated and conducted a site survey of Jolly Green 23's crash site. In addition to snaps, zippers, lap belts, adjustment buckles, a pilot's seat inflation bag, a metal set of parachutist wings, and parachute "D" ring, they found two data plates which are from the sleeve and spindle assembly of a HH53C main rotor hub. Since no other HH53C was lost within a 160-kilometer radius of this crash site, there is no doubt of its identity.
 

Several small bone fragments were also recovered, with one appearing possibly to be human. Also during this Joint Field Activity (JFA), a local villager turned over one tooth fragment allegedly associated with a member of this aircrew to the survey team. While the villager provided the tooth fragment, he provided no tangible information about the fate of the person it came from. To date none of the bone or tooth fragments have been identified as coming from any of the men aboard the helicopter. Further, because of their size and condition, there is no way to determine if human, are they American or Asian...
 

   
Other Comments:


This Veteran has an (IMO) In Memory Of Headstone in Courts of the Missing at the Honolulu Memorial, Hawaii with another memorial in Arlington National Cemetery, Arlington, VA.


 

   
 Photo Album   (More...


 2012, Vietnam Veterans Memorial
 
Title
Not Specified

Join Year
2012
   
Crest
Association Type
Memorial

Website
http://www.nps.gov/vive/index.htm
Contact Phone Number
Not Specified

Contact Email
Not Specified
Year Established
Not Specified

Owner
Not Specified
HQ Address
Not Specified

Last Updated: Apr 16, 2015
   
Comments

Not Specified

   
My Photos From This Association
No Available Photos

  2612 Also There at This Association:
Copyright Togetherweserved.com Inc 2003-2011