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Schiele

JAMES SCHIELE (POW)

Granger, Utah

Synopsis below:

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PERSONAL

 Last Name: Schiele
 First Name: James
 Middle Name: Francis
 Home of Record (official): Granger
 State (official): UT
 Date of Birth: Friday, 11 October 1946
 Sex: Male
 Race: Caucasian
 Marital Status: Single
   

MILITARY

 Branch: Army POW
 Rank: Staff Sergeant
 Serial Number: 520521563
 Component: Selective Service
 Pay grade: E-6  
 MOS: 11B40 (Infantryman)  
 Awards: Unknown  
 Unit: Bravo Company  
     

ACTION

 Start of Tour: Unknown  
 Date of Casualty:

July 12, 1967 - POW MIA

 
 Age at time of loss: 31  
 Casualty type: (A3) Hostile, died while missing
 Reason: Taken prisoner 12 July 1967, died of wounds in captivity (ground casualty - wounded - Body not recovered)
 Country: Cambodia (died)  
 Province: Unknown/Not Reported  
 Location: YA 850131  
 The Wall: Panel 23E - Row 065  
     
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SYNOPSIS:

On July 12, 1967, SP4 Martin S. Frank, PFC Nathan B. Henry, Sgt. Cordine McMurray, PFC Stanley A. Newell, PFC Richard R. Perricone, SP4 James F. Schiele and PFC James L. Van Bendegom, all members of Company B, 1st Battalion, 12th Infantry, 4th Infantry Division, were conducting a search and destroy mission along the Cambodian border when their position was overrun by the Viet Cong. With the execption of Schiele, all the men were captured. The U.S. Army notes that Schiele and Van Bendegom were captured by the North Vietnamese, while the others, apparently, were captured by Viet Cong.


PFC Schiele was seen by his platoon leader as his unit was forced to withdraw, leaving him behind. He had been hit a number of times by automatic weapons fire in the legs and chest and was thought to be dead. PFC Perricone stated in his debrief upon return to the U.S. that the enemy camp commander of Camp 102 told him that SP4 Schiele had died of wounds received in the fire fight. However, since there was no positive proof of death, the U.S. government placed Schiele in a Missing in Action category. Classified information given to the Vietnamese by Gen. John Vessey in 1987, however, states that both Schiele and Van Bendegom were captured by the North Vietnamese.