Albuquerque Journal

Ex-officer missing since 1983 found

Alleged Kirtland deserter had been living in Calif. under fictitious identity

- BY MADDY HAYDEN JOURNAL STAFF WRITER

On Jan. 17, 1984, a front-page Albuquerqu­e Journal headline announced “Kirtland Launches Search for Officer Missing 5 Months.”

That officer, Capt. William Howard Hughes Jr., was apprehende­d in California on Wednesday, more than 30 years after his mysterious disappeara­nce.

According to the Air Force Office of Special Investigat­ions (AFOSI), the State Department was recently investigat­ing a man claiming to be “Barry O’Beirne” during a passport fraud inquiry.

“After being confronted with inconsiste­ncies about his identity, the individual admitted his true name was William Howard Hughes Jr., and that he deserted from the U.S. Air Force in 1983,” an AFOSI news release reads.

Hughes, now 66, told investigat­ors that he was “depressed” about his Air Force career, so he assumed the fictitious identity of O’Beirne and had been living in California ever since.

But AFOSI spokeswoma­n Linda Card said there are many more questions to be answered as the investigat­ion continues.

At the time of his disappeara­nce in 1983, Hughes, then 31, was assigned to the Kirtlandba­sed Air Force Operation Test and Evaluation Center. He had been at Kirtland since 1981, working on highly classified operations involving NATO’s command, control and communicat­ions surveillan­ce systems, according to the news release.

He had top secret clearance, but “none that could compromise national security,” Pentagon officials said in article that appeared in the Journal on May

2, 1984.

Hughes was assigned to temporary duty in the Netherland­s, working with NATO to test its new Airborne Warning and Control System, designed to be used for surveillan­ce, command and control, battle space management and communicat­ions. He was expected to return to duty at Kirtland on Aug. 1, 1983.

He never showed up.

His car was found at the Albuquerqu­e airport and a search of his home in the 1900 block of Chandelle Loop NE revealed notes of planned activities and books to read upon his return, according to reports.

Hughes was seen in the Albuquerqu­e area withdrawin­g more than $28,000 from bank accounts, according to the AFOSI news release.

After the Air Force formally declared Hughes a deserter in December 1983, his family said in an Associated Press article printed in the Journal on Jan. 20, 1984, they believed he had been abducted.

Hughes was unmarried when he disappeare­d, but the Seattle native had three sisters.

“We do not feel he disappeare­d voluntaril­y,” his sister, Christine Hughes, said in the article.

There was even speculatio­n that Hughes may have been abducted by or defected to the Soviets.

In 1986, three years after his disappeara­nce, journalist Tad Szulc wrote a piece published in the Los Angeles Times that referred to Hughes’ “apparent defection” to the Soviet Union.

Szulc’s article came amid suspicions that the Challenger disaster and explosion of a French rocket may have been due to Soviet sabotage.

“He is worth his weight in gold to the Russians in terms of future ‘Star Wars,’ if we have them,” Szulc quotes an unidentifi­ed intelligen­ce officer as telling him.

But Card said no classified informatio­n leaks are suspected, nor is there an indication that Hughes was involved with the Soviet Union, but the investigat­ion is ongoing.

“They (AFOSI investigat­ors) said at this point there’s no indication that he had any classified informatio­n or that he gave any classified informatio­n,” Card said. “Until we have the whole story, we don’t have the story.”

Card said Hughes’ family has been notified of his apprehensi­on, but it is unknown whether they had been in contact with him or knew his whereabout­s.

Hughes is charged with desertion and awaiting pretrial confinemen­t at Travis Air Force Base in Fairfield, Calif.

Desertion carries maximum penalties of dishonorab­le discharge, forfeiture of all pay and confinemen­t of five years.

 ??  ?? William Howard Hughes Jr.
William Howard Hughes Jr.
 ??  ?? U.S. Air Force Capt. William Howard Hughes Jr. started at Kirtland in 1981, working on NATO’s command, control and communicat­ions surveillan­ce systems.
U.S. Air Force Capt. William Howard Hughes Jr. started at Kirtland in 1981, working on NATO’s command, control and communicat­ions surveillan­ce systems.

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