Although his remains have never been found, Minnesota native David Hrdlicka, an Air Force pilot who became a prisoner of war when his jet was shot down over Laos in 1965, was officially declared dead in 1977. His name has been chiseled on the Vietnam Memorial in Washington, D.C.
Despite what it calls its best efforts, the U.S. government says there is no credible evidence any Americans POWs from the Vietnam War are still held.
But Hrdlicka's wife, Carol, holds on to evidence that, at least up to 1990, Hrdlicka may have been alive and held captive. In her search for answers, she has joined a crowd that has grown suspicious of whether the United States did all it could to bring perhaps as many as hundreds of American POWs home long after peace was declared, and long after others have moved on with their lives.
Jerry Streeter, a retired insurance executive and a classmate of David Hrdlicka from St. John's Preparatory School, is also obsessed with the search, filling his Edina apartment with documents and faded satellite photos that possibly connect the dots: like the mysterious image of the letters "USA" seen on a satellite photo in a clearing of the Laotian village where Hrdlicka was last seen alive. Until it was too tattered to display, a POW/MIA flag with Hrdlicka's face on it flew every day over the St. John's campus. "We honor people who come back from wars," said Streeter, who campaigned to have St. John's fly the flag. "The people who do not come back, we feel sad about. People who come back disabled are given sympathy. But somehow we have left the POWs behind." Friday is MIA/POW Remembrance Day.
The Hrdlicka story has elements that, if true, might prove hard for a government to explain. But at its roots, it may be more about human perseverance against long odds. When evidence emerged the last time that David might still be alive, Carol had a 12-year marriage to another man annulled.
"I don't even try to convince people anymore," says Carol Hrdlicka, who lives in Kansas. "I just hand them a document. There's no sense trying to convince anybody of anything. I want them to see the documents. I want them to make up their own mind."
'The Air Corps wants him'
A photo of David Hrdlicka shows a chisel-chinned pilot with a crewcut, a silk neckerchief tucked into his flight suit. Born in Stewartville, Minn., he grew up in Sandstone. He transferred to St. John's Prep as a junior and already had a pilot's license. Next to his 1950 graduation picture it says: "Thinks the Air Corps wants him."