Vietnam MIA Air Force Maj. Curtis Dan Miller - Military Funeral

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Uploaded by on Mar 30, 2010

His wife said, "My husband was a hero. He always served people. I am so terribly proud of him ... he gave his last measure for our country."
Over the years, family members received piecemeal information. They heard reports that the Air Force had picked up emergency beacons coming from the crash site, a tip that did not pan out. In 1983, the Air Force gave Susan Miller a wedding ring found at the site, with the inscription, "Forever Love Sue."
According to a Houston Chronicle story, the 14K gold band was in perfect condition, giving family members hope that Miller was able to flee the burning wreckage.
Miller, who grew up in Palacios, Texas, met Susan, then 19, in college and the two married shortly after in 1966, she said in an interview. In 1969, she gave birth to their daughter Christy. In 1971, Miller deployed to Thailand to serve with the 16th Special Operations Squadron.
On March 29, 1972, 14 men were aboard an AC-130A Spectre gunship that took off from Ubon Royal Thai Air Force Base, Thailand, on an armed reconnaissance mission over southern Laos. The aircraft was struck by an enemy surface-to-air missile and crashed. Search and rescue efforts were stopped after a few days due to heavy enemy activity in the area.

In 1986, joint U.S.- Lao Peoples Democratic Republic teams, lead by the Joint POW/MIA Accounting Command (JPAC), surveyed and excavated the crash site in Savannakhet Province, Laos. The team recovered human remains and other evidence including two identification tags, life support items and aircraft wreckage. From 1986 to 1988, the remains were identified as those of nine men from this crew.

Between 2005 and 2006, joint teams resurveyed the crash site and excavated it twice. The teams found more human remains, personal effects and crew-related equipment. As a result, JPAC identified the other crewmen using forensic identification tools, circumstantial evidence, mitochondrial DNA and dental comparisons.

A few years later, the military sent his wife, Susan Miller his medical tags, which had been discovered during an excavation in the mid-1980s.

Finally, last year, the government told her that it had discovered additional remains at the crash site in 2005 and '06 and began notifying families as it identified them through DNA analysis. All 14 of the men, the government says, have been identified.

"With news trickling in over the years, you think you've got a good hold of it and you're in control," she said. "But then something happens, and the emotions just come flooding. It's like he went down yesterday and I just got the news."

She arrived in Dallas Ft. Worth earlier today from Hawaii as she escorted her husband's remains back to Texas. They were warmly greeted and escorted by the North Texas PGR from the airport to a funeral home in Ft. Worth.

Miller, like the stories about her husband, has contradictions.

She teaches history to middle school students and has faith and trust in her government. Yet she will also tell you "I'm not naive" and doesn't believe that the government has always shot straight with her.
She has never bought the story that Maj. Miller died in the crash.

How or when he died, she doesn't know. She figures she never will. But she is certain he is gone and, rationally, has known that for many years.

"I know he would have tried to get home to me and his little girl," she said. "I also know I tried everything in my power to find out what happened to him."

But what goes on in the head doesn't always communicate with the heart. So over the years she dated some even got a proposal or two. But her heart always told her that she was still married, for better or for worse.

"I couldn't declare him dead," she said. "That had to come from our government."

Special Thank You:
Family of Maj. Curtis Dan Miller
Texas State Representative Lois Kolkhorst
16th Special Operations Wing Honor Detail
7th Bomb Wing - Honor Guard
North Texas PGR
Texas Liberty Bell
DFW National Cemetery
Video Description:
Music
Performed by the,
Amazing Grace - USAF String Orchestra
Taps, The Air Force Song - USAF Brass Band
Forever Love Reba McEntire
Video Production
USFallen.org Video Presentation
Jerry Castillo - Producer

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Uploader Comments (jcastillo57)

  • JCastillo: There was a Richard Castillo, navigator, infrared operator on this flight. Are you related?

  • @jamesfhorvath No relationship. Thanks for the PM.

  • You do great on these viseos Love that slow march May the Major rest in peace. Amen

  • @edmundmb thanks for your kind comments...As an USAF veteran I must confess my chest was filled with pride...I too love the slow march, but the entire ceremony was dignified, honorable and respectful. The Air Force Honor Guard with the PGR, David Hall of the Liberty Bell, and the staff at DFW Nat'l Cem. and it was a beautiful and befitting ceremony for an American Hero, from the Vietnam War.

Top Comments

  • Very moving. They make our country what it is.

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All Comments (18)

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  • R.I.P. Man.

  • i see you in call of duty world at war

  • thank you miller for saving our country

  • [iminent=PsZXL8YVffOB]

  • I feel for his family & his dear friends. I hope for a different ending to my personal search for MIA/POW MAJOR RALPH C. BALCOM JR.. I do not want a funeral or DNA to confirm his death. I still hold out hope. HOPE is all I have left. As long as there is no evidence of his death, Maj. Ralph C. Balcom Jr. remains very much alive. I pray each day and night for this man. So sorry for this ending with this soldier. I have a video for Maj. Balcom. He will return to his beloved Washington State I Pray

  • I wore his name on my wrist since I was a cadet at Texas A&M and got it from Bo Gritz. It came off when I was waterskiing years later, but I never forgot him.

  • RIP-Thank You-Welcome Home-Never Forgotten

  • its men like Maj. Miller who fight for our freedom, those who risk their lives and die to defend it, who deserve the highest levels of respect. Rest In piece sir.

  • To the Miller's and all the Familys of that AC-130 Gunship that went down that night. I express my great sorrow to all the Family's and to the crew This is a very fitting tribute for the Crew that lost their lives that night. I was a weapons tech there the night they did not come back. I did not know any of the crew. I was part of a ground crew that turn the AC-130 's around for the next mission of the night. I remember how bad I felt that night for the crew. God Bless you And God bless the Crew

  • This is Lt. Col. Henry Paul Brauners Eldest Daughter Cyndi (Brauner) Waldmann. On the Virtual Wall, I have made a post via my dads part of the Virtual Wall. Thanks for this video: my youngest sister found it & posted it on facebook: so I & other family & friends can see it. Lord willing, I'd love to be in contact with the Miller family!!

    Husgs2u,

    Cyndi

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