CROOK, ELLIOTT

Name: Eliott Crook
Rank/Branch: E4/US Army
Unit: Company A, 101st Aviation Battalion, 101st Airborne Division
Date of Birth: 12 June 1948 (Sacaton AZ)
Home City of Record: Phoenix AZ
Date of Loss: 16 May 1971
Country of Loss: South Vietnam
Loss Coordinates: 161527N 1072019E (YC499987)
Status (in 1973): Killed/Body Not Recovered
Category: 3
Aircraft/Vehicle/Ground: UH1H
Refno: 1746

Other Personnel in Incident: Craig L. Farlow; Timothy J. Jacobsen; Joseph P.
Nolan (all missing)

REMARKS:

Source: Compiled 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 in 1998.

SYNOPSIS: On May 16, 1971, Lt. Joseph P. Nolan, pilot; W1 Craig L. Farlow,
aircraft commander; SP4 Elliott Crook, crew chief; SP4 Timothy J. Jacobsen,
door gunner; comprised the crew of a UH1H helicopter conducting a combat
assault insertion of ARVN Marines into a landing zone (LZ) in the vicinity of
Hue, Thua Thin Province, South Vietnam.

Lt. Nolan's helicopter was the seventh to land on the LZ. On departing the LZ,
pilots of the fifts and sixth helicopters stated that they were taking enemy
fire. Lt. Nolan radioed after touchdown that he was taking heavy ground fire,
that his crew chief was wounded. Lt. Nolan immediately took off and at 250
feet, witnesses saw his aircraft rapidly lose rotor RPM and crash into the tree
tops, bursting into flames. No survivors were seen to exit the aircraft.

On May 24, a search and recovery team made a ground search and found 2 partial
skulls and one partial right foot, all badly burned. It was also noted that
there were four more possible remains that were trapped under the heavy
wreckage. The partial skulls were later determined to be Vietnamese. The other
remains were not recovered because of hostile fire.

The crew of the UH1H was presumed to be dead, and their bodies were never
recovered. They are listed with honor among the nearly 2500 Americans still
missing in Southeast Asia until such time as their remains can be returned home
for an honorable burial.

Others missing in Southeast Asia do not have such certain fates. Many were
alive and well the last they were seen. Some described their imminent capture
over radio to would-be rescuers. Still others were known to be captives, but
disappeared from the prison system and were not released.

Unfortunately, mounting evidence indicates that hundreds of Americans are still
captive, waiting for the country they proudly served to secure their freedom.
In our haste to leave an unpopular war, it now appears that we abandoned some
of our best men. In our haste to heal the wounds of this same war, will we sign
their death warrants, or will we do what is necessary to bring them home?


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