This
is what I hope is the last posting on this aspect of the loss of Flight 19. To
recap briefly, John Steiger sent a link to a headstone for George Paonessa, a
Marine sergeant who was lost with the flight. In wondered why there was a grave
for him at Arlington National Cemetery and if that meant a body had been
recovered. Information sent by Arlington said that those lost at sea, lost in
combat or who were buried at sea were sometimes honored by a headstone in a
special section of Arlington. The request, according to the information had to
come from a family member, and I learned that such was the case of Paonessa.
However,
there was other information presented that suggested that he had survived the
disaster. This included a telegram, allegedly sent by Paonessa to his brother
several weeks after he had been declared lost. Douglas Westfall thought that
this was good evidence that Flight 19 hadn’t disappeared completely, and on the
radio show/podcast A Different Perspective made a case for this. You can
listen to it here:
A
week later, I spoke with Andy Marocco who believed he knew where Flight 19 had
disappeared, some thirty or forty miles outside the Bermuda Triangle. I asked,
specifically, about the telegram, but he said that it was a hoax. His reasoning
was that it hadn’t entered the public arena until twenty or thirty years after
the loss. You can listen to that interview here:
Doug
Westfall believed that George Paonessa had made his way to California and
became a contractor. It was his theory that Paonessa could operate out in the
open
because President Truman had pardoned those who had deserted after the
conclusion of World War II. The theory behind the pardon was that they had
served honorably, but with the war over, there was no need for them to remain
on active duty. President Carter pardoned those who had fled to Canada to avoid
the Vietnam War, so the idea wasn’t unprecedented.
Douglas Westfall |
This
George Paonessa, that Doug mentioned, had died in either the 1960s or the
1970s. I was unable to find either a headstone or an obituary for him, which
might have mentioned family and allowing us to verify the connection to Flight
19.
Andy
Marocco said that he had actually visited the cemetery where that George
Paonessa was buried. There was nothing there to connect him to the lost flight
or to the family living in New York, home of the original George Paonessa.
I
did contact one of the family members, which was how I learned about the
request for the headstone at Arlington. In that same email, he mentioned the
telegram, so I asked about this. My thinking was that if George had contacted
the family in the weeks following the loss, then he certainly would have been
in touch with them in the years that followed. There would be no reason for him
to avoid the family if he was operating a business under his own name in
California and no one was looking for him for desertion.
Andy Marocco |
The
answer was that the telegram was the last that anyone heard from him… if it had
been him. In the world today, with everyone who had violated a law, if anyone
had actually violated a law, beyond prosecution, there is no reason to maintain
the fiction that George Paonessa had perished in 1945, if he had, in fact
survived. In other words, they would be able to confirm that he had survived if
he had. There is no family history to suggest he did. The telegram, even though
it mentioned his family nickname, is a cruel hoax.
Here’s
where we are, according to what I have learned. All members of Flight 19 were
lost on December 5, 1945. The best evidence is that the flight stuck together, just
as the Flight Leader said for them to do, and all ditched together. Although
neither Doug Westfall nor Andy Marocco have hard evidence for their respective
theories, given that Andy’s is based on the official Navy documents relating to
the case, and with other evidence, it seems that his theory is the most
accurate.
This
then, is the end of this part of the discussion. At this moment, none of the
aircraft have been found and it seems that the idea that they all ditched at
once is the most logical explanation. When there is new information on this
particular aspect of the Bermuda Triangle, well, you’ll read it here.
2 comments:
If there's anything to be learned from the Roswell Slides fiasco, it's to add the qualifier 'probably' to what is seemingly the last post on a closed subject for discussion.
Dear Kevin
This is not a comment...I wanted to ask You something but have nowhere found an
Email address. On December 22 of 2009 (I know, a while ago) You wrote a critical
peace on the famous psychic lady Irene Hughes. I'm very happy to have found that
since there is almost no skeptical reports on her on the web.
Do You happen to know more about failed predictions of her or how she got so
famous because of her prediction of the 1967 Cjhicago blizzard. Nowhere
I can find what EXACTLY she said...
My email is "dalovepeter@hotmail.com"
Thank You for any hint 6 keep up the good work ! Kindest regards, Peter
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