Suicide, Jehovah Witness, and an A-10 fighter bomber....Remember?

by hubert 3 Replies latest jw friends

  • hubert
    hubert

    In 1997 there was an A-10 "Wart hog" fighter bomber pilot that went missing in an A-10, and found crashed in the Dessert in Arizona(?).

    All kinds of speculation arose from this incident, along with suicide, which from what I understand was the conclusion of the investigation. (Check Wikipedia story).

    It was reported that the parents of this pilot, especially the mother, was a devout Jehovah Witness, and one of the stories that came out was that his parents visited him the day before he disappeared, and had a meeting with him, and left him Watchtower literature about their teachings in his hotel room.

    Has there ever been a thread discussing this incident on this forum?

    If not, does anyone know anything or heard anything about this from other J.W.'s?

    Thanks.

    Hubert

  • purplesofa
    purplesofa

    Air Force examines personal relationships of pilot who killed himself

    Associated Press/November 18, 1998
    By Patrick Graham

    PHOENIX -- The father of an Air Force pilot who flew his jet into a Colorado mountain denounced speculation Wednesday that his son struggled with his sexual identity before killing himself.

    A report by the Air Force Office of Special Investigations, obtained by the Tucson Citizen, examines in part the sexuality of Capt. Craig Button and chronicles interviews with his closest friends, most of them women. The psychological autopsy report also looks at Button's spiritual mindset.

    The report seeks to shed some light on Button's personal life -- which was questioned in a newspaper report late last year. The Citizen had reported that the military was investigating the possibility Button may have been homosexual and distraught he could be expelled from the military.

    "My wife and I made a pact following our son's death that we would never talk to the media," retired Air Force Lt. Col. Richard Button said in a telephone interview from his Long Island, N.Y. home.

    But before ending the phone call, Button interjected: "They are printing lies and speculation."

    The Air Force report, however, never offers a definitive answer as to why the 32-year-old Button took his life. The Citizen on Wednesday published parts of the report.

    "We conducted about 200 interviews during the investigation," said Maj. Steve Murray, spokesman for the Office of Special Investigations. "No credible evidence to support theories of homosexuality, financial difficulties, family conflicts, militia ties or any other possible motivation has been discovered."

    Murray said there are no plans to reopen the investigation. "(The Air Force) thoroughly explored all potentially relevant areas of Captain Button's life in an effort to better understand the circumstances which may have contributed to this event," he added.

    Button's A-10 attack jet, which carried four 500-pound bombs from Davis- Monthan Air Force Base in Tucson, broke formation during a training mission with two other planes April 2, 1997. For three hours he flew an erratic 500-mile course that ended when he crashed into the 13,000-foot Gold Dust Peak near Eagle, Colo.

    The report notes a phone call the night before Button's exercise with live bombs on the Barry M. Goldwater Bombing Ranger near Gila Bend. The April 1 call appeared to have upset Button, who refused to discuss it with his roommate, the newspaper said.

    "Something about the last few days and troubling telephone calls was enormously upsetting to him," the report said. "We may never know why he was in such much turmoil or with whom he talked."

    The report makes reference to homosexual allegations and a newspaper story about a call from a man who claimed to be Button's gay lover. The call had been made just days before Button's disappearance.

    The report also focuses on Button's reputed unrequited love with a woman in the Air Force he met as an ROTC cadet at the New York Institute of Technology, where he graduated in 1990, the newspaper said.

    Though Button and the woman were stationed at different Air Force bases, the two kept in contact through letters in the months after a 1991 ski trip, the report said.

    But the woman said she never considered having a monogamous relationship with Button.

    Button called the woman the afternoon before his final flight, but she had to cut the conversation short because she was at work, the report said.

    The final area the report looks into is Button's religious beliefs and possible conflicts with his job as a fighter pilot. His mother is a devout Jehovah's Witness opposed to killing, the newspaper said.

    His parents were in Tucson days before his death. They told investigators they had talked wi

  • purplesofa
  • LongHairGal
    LongHairGal

    I know the incident to which you refer.

    The pilot whose last name was Button, left a flight formation and crashed his plane into the mountains. I think the year was 1997(?) If my memory is correct, a bomb he supposedly was carrying was never found. Whether this was a suicide or an accident nobody knows. There were TV programs about it and a lot of speculation but I do not recall an actual thread here about it.

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