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Last Seen Alive        The Search for Missing POWs

                                              From the Korean War

Coming Memorial Day - Last Seen Alive the Documentary

"Dumas was tied to me as we marched toward the POW camp..."

Cpl. Roger A. Dumas, Plainfield, Connecticut:
  • Reported missing in action Nov. 4, 1950.
  • Reported a prisoner of war in April 1953.
  • "Presumed" dead under U.S. law in February 1954.
  • Army status changed from MIA to POW in 1984.
  • High-priority case for U.S.-Chinese meeting 1999.
  • 'Little reliable information' at Pentagon Feb. 2000.
           "...I saw Roger was led away by two Chinese...about 100 yards from the
      repatriation point" in August 1953.  Ex-POW Bobby Caruth.
"Dumas. I remember Dumas...He was with our group of POWs." Ex-POW Ciro Santos.
Documents and Testimony - American POWs in
Communist POW Camps after Korean War Armistice
      
The POW Papers: - Secrets and Denials
  Released by the Chinese Communists in April 1953, Sgt. Cecil V. Preston reported the names of more than 30 fellow POWs. A few had died. Most were still POWs. One was Cpl. Roger Dumas. More than 3,000 U.S. POWs were released several months later, but some never came home. For years, reports like Preston's were kept classified. Now the Pentagon's  POW/MIA chief says the U.S. has no evidence that Cpl. Dumas was "ever captured."  READ THE EVIDENCE HERE.
DPMO Denial     Captured by Chinese    May Be Alive
More POWs             Secret Data        Certified a POW

From Ink-Slinger Press: _________________________________________________

The True Story Behind the Search for
the Forgotten Men of the Forgotten War

With the fall of Communism throughout the Soviet bloc, new documents and witnesses of the fearful decades after World War II began to appear.

Among the darkest secrets of Stalinism was the transfer and exploitation of American and other western prisoners of war.  Soldiers, sailors, Marines and airmen who should have been repatriated under the Geneva Convention were instead shipped to interrogation centers and labor camps.

The war in Korea (1950-53) and the Cold War flights that were poorly disguised as "weather missions" left many hundreds of American servicemen missing.

What were the real connections between the young dictatorship of Kim Il-Sung, the covert Soviet role in Korea, and the thousands of still-missing American POWs?

Some of the answers have surfaced. Read them here.  

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$15 per copy, plus $3.00 shipping and handling. Bulk Discounts.
ISBN 0-9646982-0-X
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Last Seen Alive also available from Amazon.com

Copyright 2000 Ink-Slinger Press.
Last updated: April 07, 2000.