Dexter, Ronald James
Army Sergeant major

Ronald James Dexter, age 34, from Abilene, Texas.

Service era: Vietnam

Date of death: Saturday, June 3, 1967
Death details: On June 3, 1967, a CH-46A Sea Knight (bureau number 150955) carrying a crew of six and an unknown number of South Vietnamese personnel took off for an extraction mission in Laos. The aircraft took enemy small arms fire when lifting off from the landing zone and crashed in the vicinity of XD 795 050. One member of the aircraft’s crew was rescued three days later. Two crewmembers, the door gunner and another crewmember, were captured by enemy forces; the door gunner was eventually returned to U.S. custody, at which time he reported that the other crewmember had died during their captivity. The remaining occupants of the Sea Knight were killed in the initial incident, and their remains were recovered and identified following the end of hostilities. Sergeant First Class Ronald James Dexter, who joined the U.S. Army from Texas, was a member of the Command and Control Detachment of the 5th Special Forces Group and was a passenger aboard the Sea Knight when it went down. He was captured following the crash, and reportedly died in captivity on July 29, 1967. Attempts to locate or identify his remains have been unsuccessful. Following the incident, the Army promoted SFC Dexter to the rank of Sergeant Major (SGM). Today, Sergeant Major Dexter is memorialized on the Courts of the Missing at the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific.
Cemetery: Memorialized at Zion Lutheran Church in Matteson, Illinois

Source: National Archives, Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency, findagrave.com 

Gardner, John Garrett
Marines Captain

John Garrett Gardner, age 26, from Hot Springs, North Carolina, Madison county.

Service era: Vietnam

Date of death: Saturday, June 3, 1967
Death details: On June 12, 2000, the Central Identification Laboratory-Hawaii (CILHI) identified the remains of Captain John Garrett Gardner, missing from the Vietnam War. Captain Gardner entered the U.S. Marine Corps from North Carolina and was a member of Marine Medium Helicopter Squadron 165, Marine Air Group 36, 1st Marine Air Wing. On June 3, 1967, he copiloted a CH-46A Sea Knight (bureau number 150955, call sign “YWZ”) carrying five other crew members and an unknown number of South Vietnamese special forces members on an extraction mission in Salavan (formerly Saravane) Province, Laos. While taking off from the landing zone, the aircraft was hit by enemy small arms fire and crashed, killing Capt Gardner. His remains could not be recovered at the time. However, between 1993 and 1996, a joint U.S. task force traveled to Salavan Province and recovered artifacts and human remains from the site; the combined remains were sent to CILHI for analysis. Investigators were able to forensically identify Capt Gardner among the remains.
Cemetery: Memorialized at Arlington National, interred in New Flats Cemetery in Spring Creek, North Carolina

Source: National Archives, Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency, findagrave.com

Laney, Billy Ray
Army Master sergeant

Billy Ray Laney, age 27, from Birmingham, Alabama, Jefferson county.

Service era: Vietnam

Date of death: Saturday, June 3, 1967
Death details: On June 12, 2000, the Central Identification Laboratory-Hawaii (CILHI) identified the remains of Sergeant Major Billy Ray Laney, missing from the Vietnam War. Sergeant Major Laney entered the U.S. Army from Alabama and was a member of the Command and Control Detachment, 5th Special Forces Group. On June 3, 1967, he was a passenger aboard a CH-46A Sea Knight (bureau number 150955, call sign “YWZ”) carrying six crew members and an unknown number of South Vietnamese special forces members on an extraction mission in Salavan (formerly Saravane) Province, Laos. While taking off from the landing zone, the aircraft was hit by enemy small arms fire and crashed, killing SGM Laney. His remains could not be recovered at the time. However, between 1993 and 1996, a joint U.S. task force traveled to Salavan Province and recovered artifacts and human remains from the site; the combined remains were sent to CILHI for analysis. Investigators were able to forensically identify SGM Laney among the remains.
Cemetery: New Home Missionary Baptist Church in Moreland, Alabama

Source: National Archives, Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency, findagrave.com