SINGLETON, DANIEL EVERETT
Name: Daniel Everett Singleton Rank/Branch: O2/US Air Force Unit: 469th Tactical Fighter Squadron Date of Birth: 08 March 1943 Home City of Record: Akron OH Date of Loss: 26 January 1969 Country of Loss: Laos Loss Coordinates: 163700N 1061300E (XD297373) Status (in 1973): Missing in Action Category: 3 Aircraft/Vehicle/Ground: F4E Refno: 1366
Other Personnel in Incident: Russell K. Utley (missing)
Source: Compiled by Homecoming II Project 01 September 1990 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 2006.
REMARKS:
SYNOPSIS: The Phantom, used by Air Force, Marine and Navy air wings, served a multitude of functions including fighter-bomber and interceptor, photo and electronic surveillance. The two man aircraft was extremely fast (Mach 2), and had a long range (900 - 2300 miles, depending on stores and mission type). The F4 was also extremely maneuverable and handled well at low and high altitudes. Most pilots considered it one of the "hottest" planes around.
Maj. Russell K. Utley was a pilot and 1Lt. Daniel E. Singleton the electronics warfare officer of an F4E attached to the 409th Tactical Fighter Squadron at Korat Airbase, Thailand. On January 26, 1969, the two were assigned an operational mission which took them over Savannakhet Province, Laos.
When the aircraft was about 5 miles southwest of the city of Sepone, it was hit by hostile fire and crashed. Pilots of other aircraft observed no parachutes leaving the aircraft, and no emergency beeper signals were detected. There was the chance the two ejected unseen, and they were classified Missing in Action.
Nearly 600 Americans were lost in Laos during the Vietnam war. Although the numbers actually termed "prisoner of war" are quite low, this can be explained by the blanket of security surrounding the "secret war" the U.S. waged in Laos. To protect the ruse that we "were not in Laos," details of many loss incidents were "rearranged" to show a loss or casualty in South Vietnam. Only a handful of publicly-exposed cases were ever acknowledged POW, even though scores of pilots and ground personnel were known to have been alive and well at last contact, thus increasing the chance they were captured alive.
The Lao communist faction, the Pathet Lao, stated on several occasions that they held "tens of tens" of American prisoners, but the Pathet Lao were not included in the Paris Peace agreements ending American involvement in the war. As a consequence, no American POWs held in Laos were negotiated for. Not one American held in Laos has ever been released. They were abandoned to the enemy.
Reports continue to be received that Americans are alive today, being held captive. Whether Singleton and Utley are among them is not known. What is certain, however, is that they deserve than the abandonment they received by the country they proudly served.
Russell K. Utley was promoted to the rank of Colonel and Daniel E. Singleton to the rank of Major during the period they were maintained missing.
========================== From: "C W Magsig" To: <info@pownetwork.org> Subject: Utley/Singleton Bio Date: Mon, 21 Aug 2006 17:41:05 -0400
The facts you have printed are not entirely accurate.
Russ and Dan were members of the 469th TFS out of Korat RTAB, Thailand. On the night in question, they rolled in on a target in Laos and never pulled out. While enemy fire hitting the aircraft was a possibility, it was never confirmed.
No chutes were seen, but it was a night mission so even if they had bailed out, it is unlikely that they would have been seen.
I served as Dan Singleton's Summary Courts Officer, knew both Dan and Russ very well, and only send you this to improve the accuracy of the record.
CWMagsig Colonel, USAF, Ret