Vanity wrote:N1095A,
I'm impressed by your collection !
Any chance to see close-ups of the belt (to see what's on the buckle) and same with the bracelet ?
The belt buckle has the US Navy Surface Warfare insignia.
http://stores.uniforms-4you.com/catalog ... Esmall.jpg (mine is the gold Officer's version) It's similar to the buckle TM wore, except the insignia is larger on mine, and I don't have "MAGNUM" engraved below the insignia. I could make an exact replica pretty easily with a visit to my local Army Navy store, but the cool thing about my stuff is that I can wear it everyday, and only MPI fans would recognize it. The bracelet is one of several I have. This one bears the name Capt. Lewis P. Smith II, (a Vietnam era MIA from a neighboring town) and the date he went missing 5-30-68.
Magnum's MIA bracelet had the name Kenneth Ray Lancaster, and here is Lancaster's story:
SP4 Kenneth R. Lancaster was a team leader assigned to Headquarters & Headquarters Company Long Range Reconnaissance Platoon (LRRP) of the 9th Infantry Division. On January 3, 1968, Lancasters LRRP team was being extracted by helicopter from a designated pickup point in Khan Hoa Province, South Vietnam, near the city of Duc My.
About one minute after takeoff, a member of the team saw SP4 Lancaster hanging onto the right skid of the aircraft as the aircraft continued to gain altitude. The pilot was informed and requested to land. When it became evident that the pilot was not able to land due to rough terrain, immediate efforts were made to lower a rope. However, before the rescue attempt could be made, Lancaster fell from the skid of the aircraft while the helicopter was at an altitude of 1000 to 1500 feet above the ground.
The area in which Lancaster fell had heavy vegetation and a triple canopy jungle, creating a slim possibility that the trees and heavy vegetation may have broken Lancaster's fall to some degree. The area was searched that day and again on January 7 and January 8 by American and indigenous platoons without success.
Efforts to conduct a thorough search were limited because no one was able to pinpoint the precise location where Lancaster fell, and the area was under heavy enemy patrol. It was felt that there was a very high probability that the enemy knew the fate of SP4 Lancaster, alive or dead.
Kenny is one of nearly 2500 Americans still missing, prisoner or unaccounted for in Southeast Asia. Reports relating to these Americans continue to mount, and many authorities believe there are hundreds still alive in captivity today. The Vietnamese deny knowledge of Americans in Southeast Asia, and the U.S. Government only acknowledges the "possibility" that some remain.
It would be nothing short of miraculous if Kenny Lancaster survived falling 1000 feet into the jungle, but his family cannot mourn until it is known for certain that he is dead. They know someone has the answers. It is devastating to consider that he may have survived to know he was abandoned to the enemy.