KNIGHT, BILLY Remains returned/CACCF files Name: Billy Knight Rank/Branch: E5/US Army Unit: Date of Birth: 18 December 1935 Home City of Record: CLIMAX GA Date of Loss: November 1965 Country of Loss: South Vietnam Loss Coordinates: 133400N 1090015E Status (in 1973): Prisoner of War Category: 1 Aircraft/Vehicle/Ground: Ground Refno: 0000 Other Personnel in Incident: (none missing) Source: Compiled by Homecoming II Project 15 February 1991 from one or more of the following: raw data from U.S. Government agency sources, correspondence with POW/MIA families, published sources, interviews. Updated by the P.O.W. NETWORK 1998, CACCF files. REMARKS: 730127 PRG SAYS DIC 661205 SYNOPSIS: With each remains repatriation, the Vietnamese release to the U.S. information they believe pertains to the remains. Most of these cases are readily correlated by U.S. officials, but others are completely baffling. Three cases in point are Knight, Scutier and Nicotera. Carl Nicotera was listed on a Vietnamese list as Nocoera, Cari, date of death December 1966. The U.S. correlated this information with enlisted man Carl Nicotera, who was discharged from the Army in October 1968 and was living (in the mid-1980s) in Hartford, Connecticut. Nicotera had never been a POW. Billie Knight was listed as captured November 1965, died in captivity December 1965. U.S. casualty records show that Knight died in a helicopter which crashed and burned November 1965. Memorial Affairs files show that remains were identified and returned to CONUS in February 1966. Other files indicate he is still missing. CACCF records indicate a loss date of 22 October 1968 from an explosive device, ground casualty, remains recovered. James J. Scuitier was listed as captured March 1968, died March 1968. U.S. casualty records show Scutier died February 1968 in Vietnam onboard a tank which had been hit by an anti-tank missile. Files show remains identified as Scutier were returned in February 1968. Other records indicate he is still missing. Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) still maintains these names on the list of missing and in Army files because it feels the Vietnamese may have mismatched identification to remains in their control. It is believed possible that someday remains related to these cases may be returned and it would be helpful in establishing a positive identity for them. It remains uncertain whether Scuitier, Knight and Nicotera died in captivity, were ever captured, or indeed, ever missing.