AUSTIN, CHARLES DAVID

Name: Charles David Austin
Rank/Branch: O2/USAF
Unit: 433rd Tactical Fighter Squadron, Ubon AF TH
Date of Birth: 27 February 1942
Home City of Record: New Canaan CT
Date of Loss: 24 April 1967
Country of Loss: North Vietnam
Loss Coordinates: 205300N 1051000E (WJ173090)
Status (in 1973): Missing In Action
Category: 2
Acft/Vehicle/Ground: F4C

Others In Incident: Herman L. Knapp (missing)

Source: Compiled by Homecoming II Project 01 April 1990 from one or more of the
following: raw data from U.S. Government agency sources, correspondence with
POW/MIA families, published sources, interviews.

REMARKS: SURVIVAL UNLIKELY

SYNOPSIS: Charles Austin was lucky. All his life, according to his sister, Judy,
he always managed to get out of tough situations. "He was like Houdini", she
said.

On April 24, 1967, Charles Austin's luck ran out. On that day, Austin was
serving as bombardier/navigator onboard Maj. Herman L. Knapp's F4C Phantom
fighter/bomber. The aircraft was the lead in a flight of four dispatched from
Ubon Airfield, Thailand on a strike mission over Vietnam. The strike was on a
five-span bridge four miles north of the center of Hanoi. The raid's purpose was
to sever North Vietnam's rail links with Communist China. An electrical
transformer station seven miles north of Hanoi was also attacked.

During the strike, Knapp and Austin's aircraft was struck by a flak burst,
disintegrated, and two large pieces of flaming wreckage were seen to strike the
gound in a fireball. No parachutes were seen and no beepers were heard.
Nevertheless, it was apparently believed that Knapp and Austin may have exited
the aircraft, as both men were classified Missing in Action, rather than Killed
in Action, Body Not Recovered. Eleven years later, based on no information to
indicate the two were alive, they were administratively declared dead.

Austin and Knapp are among over 2300 Americans who remain missing from American
involvement in Southeast Asia. Unlike "MIA's" from other wars, most of these men
could be accounted for, dead or alive.

Were it not for nearly 10,000 reports relating to Americans missing in Southeast
Asia, missing men like Knapp and Austin could be forgotten. But many officials
who have seen these largely classified reports, believe there are still hundreds
of Americans alive in captivity in Southeast Asia. As long as even one man is
alive, we owe him our very best efforts to bring him home.
