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Years Months Days Hours Minutes Seconds
This is how long Since the last POW left Vietnam!!
How Much Longer must they wait??

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Name: Patrick Robert Curran

Rank/Branch: O2/US Marine Corps

Unit: VMA 242, 1st Marine Air Wing

Date of Birth: 05 November 1943

Home City of Record: Bensenville IL

Date of Loss: 29 September 1969

Country of Loss: Laos

Loss Coordinates: 161500N 1065700E (XD678036)

Status (in 1973): Missing In Action

Category: 4

Aircraft/Vehicle/Ground: A6A

Other Personnel In Incident: Luther A. Lono (missing)

Source: Compiled by Homecoming II Project 15 March 1990 with the assistance of

one or more of the following: raw data from U.S. Government agency sources,

correspondence with POW/MIA families, published sources, interviews.

I have worn this man's MIA bracelet for many years.  I have met his mother, who is now deceased, without ever knowing what happened to her son. We cannot continue to ignore the fact that we have abandoned over 2000 of our own in a hostile foreign land.  

SYNOPSIS: On 29 September, 1969, Maj. Luther A. Lono, pilot; and 1Lt. Patrick R. Curran, bombardier navigator were dispatched aboard an A6A to conduct an armed reconnaissance mission in support of Seventh U.S. Air Force operations over Laos. The mission was under the control of an Air Force Airborne Tactical Air Control aircraft, and was to be conducted in a heavily defended enemy area.

The mission proceeded without incident until 8:50 p.m., at which time the Airborne Tactical Air Control aircraft lost contact with the Lono/Curran aircraft. Their last radio contact had been about 25 miles west of Khe Sanh. Attempts to contact the aircraft were unsuccessful, and at 10:30 p.m., the commanding officer of the 11th Aircraft Group 11 declared them "overdue."

At this declaration, electronic search efforts began for the crew members, and a signal was received by the Tactical Air Control aircraft at 0248 hours on September 30 which was believed to be a signal from an emergency transmitter. Subsequent attempts to contact the crew were unsuccessful. A visual search began at dawn on September 30, but no sign of the crew or aircraft was found.

According to Curran's mother, Curran and Lono's aircraft quietly landed in heavily-guarded enemy territory that night, and was taken intact. Curran and Lono were either captured at that time, or executed. They were alive. Mrs. Curran believes her son is still alive, and has worked tirelessly to free him and others she believes also to be alive. Both Curran and Lono were declared Missing in Action.

Nearly 600 Americans were lost in Laos, but because the U.S. did not recognize the communist government there, we did not negotiate for the "tens of tens" of American prisoners the Pathet Lao stated that they held. As a result, not one American prisoner held in Laos ever returned.

Since the end of the war, nearly 10,000 reports of Americans missing in Southeast Asia have been received by the U.S. Government, convincing many authorities that hundreds are still languishing in communist prisons.

Luther Lono and Patrick Curran understood that undertaking the missions they flew might mean they could be killed, wounded or captured. It probably never crossed their minds that the country they proudly served would abandon them.

There is a cross in front of Patrick's name on the Wall.  That means that he has not been found and is still listed as MIA.  We owe him and all of the others the respect and dignity of bringing them home to their own soil.  Whether alive or dead, they have earned this right.  They have paid a dearer price than any of us for freedom.

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Read this.  Perhaps it will help you to understand:

"Mr. President:

I want you to know what I remember every night as I lay in my bed for many long hours before I finally drift off to sleep.

It is about 10:00 pm. I've just finished eating my ration of cold rice along with the raw meat of a small bush mouse that I found as I worked in the woods around my camp. I had to crush the mouse with my foot to kill it. Then I had to use my teeth, or at least, what's left of my teeth, to tear the flesh from it's body, fur and all. Meats of any sort are extremely hard to find in this part of the world, so I was pretty lucky, I guess? I'll have to bury the remains of the mouse inside my hut. If the V.C. find out that I had any kind of extra food, I will be beaten for hours.

It is very hot and humid in my hut. I sleep with four other POWs, and all of us smell like Death. I am one of two Americans, the others are one Aussie and one Canadian. The Canuck is in really bad shape. One of our Gook guards took a dislike to him and had him beaten for several hours last night. His jaw is broken, he lost a few teeth and we think he has at least two broken ribs. Don't think he will make it to the end of the week. We sit here staring at him, tears in our eyes and a sickness in our hearts, because we can't lift a finger to help him.

Once a night, every night, someone in one of the huts is taken out to receive a beating. Not because they've done anything, it's just the way of the V.C. They tie one of us up to the flag pole and we become their "Party Toy". They sit around and get drunk and when one of them feels like it, they come over to us and kick , punch, slap, whip or hit us with a piece of rubber or wood. The rest of us lay in our huts and we can hear every punch and kick as they are given. We hear the screams or the grunts coming from our Brother as he takes the beating. We feel his every pain just as if we ourselves had been hit. For we all know, only too well, just how it feels. Somewhere in the night all goes silent. We never know until the end of the next day if our Brother survived or if he has died. Sadly, we hoped he had died. He would have then finally escaped from this "Hole in Hell".

Morning arrives with intense heat and pain. The pain comes from the boot or the gun butt of one of the guards. It also comes from the feeling of hunger the pains of wounds which have not yet healed. The guards drag us from our huts by our chains, some by our feet, some by our hair and some by our genitals. They lauch as we are dragged into the center of the camp.

We stand there under the very hot sun. Many of us have soiled ourselves during the night. Some out of fear because they have lost control of their body organs. Many of us have various types of bugs crawling over our bodies and flies buzzing around the stench of our bodies. Most of us that still have hair, are fully infected with lice and other skin disorders. Roll call is taken and we must answer in their language. Any other language other than Vietnamese, including French is forbidden. I have learned their tongue very well, as have all of us. We are then marched off.

Every day and every night, it is always the same. We have been here a very long time now. Many of us are too weak to work, but we try, .....we have to. My Brothers are dying at the rate of one a month. Each one of us waits for his day or night to come.

SOME NIGHTS as I fall asleep in my hut, I remember. It is no good to remember. The pain is sometimes too strong to bare and it will certainly drive you crazy, if nothing else does. But, I do remember.

I remember nights out on patrol, on assignments that were highly classified. My orders, to seek out and destroy designated targets. I remember and I enjoy the memory of killing these bastards that, now are killing me bit by bit. I remember other things too. My wife and the baby boy she held in her arms as she said goodbye to me "stateside", as I left for the Nam!

My boy would be of age now to serve and as I lay here, I hope that he never joins up. I hope that, his mother, my wife, has forgotten about me and found herself another man and another life. I would not want my son or my wife or my family and friends, to see me as I am now. At times like this, I cry and in my mind I scream until I finally fall asleep.

I am in another part of the world now, one of those few fortunate POWs that found a way out of the Nam and back to the real world, but I never truly left the Nam. It is with me every minute of the day and all through the long hours of the night.

My body has been ruined by the many beatings that I survived. My mind has been all but destroyed by the many memories that haunt me, and I can not shake the guilt I feel for having survived.

I will not return home to the U.S., I can not! I know that if I did, you Mr. President, would label me as a "traitor". I will not allow that to happen. I can not go back to my family and friends. It is far better that they believe that I am DEAD.

I no longer survive, I only exist. I speak of the Nam to no one! I lie to get work and I never stay in one place for too long. I have changed my name and I never make any friends. As in the Nam, I wait for my turn to DIE!

But, I wanted you to know that I am still ALIVE! A Vietnam Veteran that you abandoned so many years ago. I will write you again as the years pass. I would not want you to forget about all my Brothers that died as POWs. I would not want you to forget about the FEW, that SURVIVED!.

I will hope that the day will come for you, when you must lay in bed as I do, remembering as I do, and sleeping only when you can't stay awake any longer. I do this for myself, but mostly for my Brothers that cannot. I made this promise to myself and my brothers as we lay DYING in a hut in the jungles of Vietnam. They will never be FORGOTTEN, and you will never be FORGIVEN!!!!!!

POW/MIA Vietnam 1964-1982 (Veteran)"

*** this letter was obtained through the Canadian POW/MIA Info Center***

WRITE TO YOUR STATE'S SENATORS AND CONGRESS.  WRITE TO THE PRESIDENT.  TELL THEM THAT WE CANNOT BEGIN A NEW MELLENIUM UNTIL WE HAVE FINISHED THE BUSINESS OF THE OLD ONE.  TELL THEM YOU WANT THEM TO BRING OUR SONS, BROTHERS, FATHERS, SISTERS HOME NOW!



USE THE FINDER ABOVE TO FIND YOUR REP AND CREATE
A LETTER.  IT ONLY TAKES MINUTES,
BUT IS WORTH SO MUCH!

Below is a letter written some time ago,
by Patrick Curran's Mother, Ann:

"Where are all our past administrations? Have they dispenced with the responsibilities that still exist? Is it "Out of sight-out of mind?" Well, if you are out there hear this! You have abandoned many young men to despair and lost hope! Will their country ever keep the promise that their country will certainly not leave them to be tortured mentally and physically?

We cannot leave these honorable men to the disposal of the countries in which they are held as slaves or prisoners.

We, the greatest nation in the world, are in turmoil as we wait and hope. That we have the power to influence other nations yet cannot even take care of our dear men who gave of themselves to give our country this power is sad.

My faith is not in those in power anymore. Our veterans and military must be the force that finds the truth and gets our men home.

My heart bleeds for my son as I wonder each day if he is well. I wish I could do so much more to make him the happy soldier again, and once more a free men. Is freedom for him some fantasy?

We wait and have not forgotten. If it takes forever we'll fight to bring them home.

If you can still remember me, my dear son, I love you."

The following was written, of Mrs. Curran,
by an activist a couple years ago:

Mrs. Ann Curran

Mrs. Ann Curran was active in the Chicago area and travelled all over this great country of ours to help people understand the plight of Patrick, and all the others still held. She wanted to go to Southeast Asia as a Peace Corp volunteer, and willingly chained herself to the White House fence to get answers. She opened her home and heart to POW/MIA activists and to many, many families still looking for answers.

She believed in Christmas miracles.

Ann Curran passed away last month. It saddened me very much that this happened before: 1) I had a chance to write or talk with her, and 2) before she had closure re: her brave son, Marine Aviator Patrick Curran.

Life is so short. I literally received news about her passing on THE DAY that I had finally secured her mailing address in Chicago. I was going to write her that day. I was trying to find out her phone number to give her a call about her son.

It didn't happen. She's gone. A part of me died inside when she died. I can't explain this, but I think how I feel about Mrs. Curran's loss has something to do with fairness and all the good things in life good people are supposed to experience. Things Ann didn't experience fully in her life because her son loyally served his country while his country has not returned that loyalty in kind.

I feel a great need to continue my quest to find answers to the questions, "Where is Major Curran? Is he dead or perhaps alive? Can we bring him home? IF SO, WHEN!? TODAY!?"

IF NOT, WHY NOT!? Any help from any of our friends, family and Website visitors in answering these questions will place me in your debt with gratitude.

(W. Dale DeBord)

This is real -- and this is personal.  It should be
personal for every human being.  If it was your son,
or your father or brother, would you not pray
for help from the rest of us?  Please do what
ever you can to help us end the torment and
bring them home!!!!

"I will bring you home!"

Check Out Some Facts - Then act on what
your heart tells you!

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Current Information concerning POW/MIA Issues!

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