Age 31 - From New Orleans, Louisiana
Killed in action on December 2, 1966 - Laos
SP4 Lee Boudreaux was performing duties as
a door gunner on a combat mission with
the 281st Assault Helicopter Company on December 2, 1966 when he was
killed in action.
(from www.virtualwall.org)
SP4 LEE JOSEPH BOUDREAUX, JR.
From the 281st Assault Helicopter
Company "In Remembrance" pages
(http://281stahc-assn.org/remembrance/remem_html/kia-mia/boudreaux.htm)
Specialist
Fourth Class (SP/4-E-4) Lee Joseph Boudreaux, Jr. a 31 year old Single,
Caucasian Male, from New Orleans, Louisiana was serving as the Door
Gunner on the crew of UH-1D 65-1088 which was performing a Special
Operations rescue mission Under the command of WO Daniel Sulander. WO
Donald Harrison was the pilot and SP4 William Bodzick was the Crew
Chief. The crew was engaged by a hostile ground force resulting in
their aircraft being shot down by hostile forces, killing all on
board.
Sp/4 Lee
Joseph Boudreaux joined the 281st AHC on January 22, 1966, after having
served six months as a Military Policeman South of Saigon, South
Vietnam. Prior to joining the 281st Lee spent Christmas with his family
in New Orleans, Louisiana and according to his father if Lee could not
have gotten a door gunner assignment he would not have extended. Lee
initially enlisted into the U.S. Army in 1955 and served in the
Paratroopers in Japan. He was separated from the army in
1958 and returned home to became a New Orleans Police Officer. He
reentered the Army in December of 1965 and was trained as a Military
Policeman at Ft. Gordon, Georgia. He was then assigned to Vietnam as an
MP and one of his fellow soldiers posted this note:
From: John
Mott
MahotOne76@AOL.com
Tuesday,
January 11, 2000
Lee was
stationed in my squad with the 630th MP Company Vietnam in 1966. He had
been in the Army from 1955-58 and prior to his second enlistment was a
Policeman in New Orleans. He was on voluntary TDY from our company to
the 1st Aviation BN when he was KIA. The mission he went on where he
lost his life was a volunteer mission to extract Special Forces troops
that were pinned down. This man was older and more mature than most of
the guys in the 630th. He was our friend and mentor. I think of you
often, Lee. I am with you in spirit. John
At
approximately 10 AM on December 2, 1966, Lee and the crew of 65-1088
along with 1st Sergeant Irby Dyer, a Project Delta Special Forces
Medic, left Khe Sahn South Vietnam, along with six other UH-1s from the
281st AHC. Their mission was to recover a long-range recon team located
inside the borders of Laos. The recon team on the ground
consisted of two Special Forces Sergeants, Master Sergeant
Russell Bott and Master Sergeant Willie Stark along with a number of
South Vietnamese Army personnel. The team was in contact
and under heavy fire from larger enemy force from the NVA 325B
Division, SGT Stark had been wounded in the chest and leg, and several
ARVN troops had been killed or wounded.
The team
reported that they were running low on ammunition and that their
situation was precarious. As the UH-1D neared the team's position
and begin to make it approach it came under heavy intense automatic
weapons fire. The crew of a 281st AHC helicopter flying
protective cover reported that 65-1088 was hit by heavy ground fire and
descended in a nose down attitude and crashed. The aircraft was
immediately engulfed in flames and continued to burn for the
approximately fifteen minutes.
Searches
conducted between 10 and 13 December located the wreckage of
65-1088 and identified the remains of the five men aboard, but the
search team was not able to recover the bodies. No trace of SGT
Bott or SGT Stark was found. Another team was inserted to recover
the remains of the helicopter crew, but found that US air strikes in
the area had hit the UH-1 wreckage. While three bodies could be
positively identified and recovered, WO Sulander and SGT Dyer's remains
could not be identified.
Although
there was some evidence that Bott was captured, there is no certainty
of what happened to either of the two Special Forces men.
On 2 August
1973 WO Sulander's status was changed from missing in action to Killed
in Action and presumed Dead, Body Not Recovered.
INFORMATION
FOUND AT VIETNAM VETERANS
MEMORIAL FUND WEBSITE
(www.vvmf.org)
LEE JOSEPH JR BOUDREAUX
is honored on Panel 13E, Row 3 of
the Vietnam Veterans Memorial.
Full Name: LEE JOSEPH JR BOUDREAUX
Wall Name: LEE J BOUDREAUX JR
Date of Birth: 11/6/1935
Date of Casualty: 12/2/1966
Home of Record: NEW ORLEANS
State: LA
Branch of Service: ARMY
Rank: SP4
Casualty Country: LAOS
Casualty Province: LZ