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Mother’s Long Search for MIA Son Ends in U.S. Senate Hearing Room : Vietnam War: She was one of several witnesses who told committee members that there is evidence their missing relatives are still alive in Southeast Asia.

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TIMES STAFF WRITER

After her son’s plane was shot down over Laos on Valentine’s Day in 1969, Gladys Fleckenstein began a search that would take her to Paris, Geneva and Laos. Her quest ended Thursday in a Senate hearing room before members of the Select Committee on POW/MIA Affairs.

“This is the end of my journey for my son. I’ve gone as far as I can go, I’m afraid, with trying to find out about my son and bring him home,” the Big Bear Lake resident said in an interview shortly before she began testifying to the committee.

“It’s in their hands now,” Fleckenstein said of the panel members. “They are going to get to the bottom of this one way or the other if it’s going to be resolved.”

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Fleckenstein was one of several relatives of POWs and MIAs still listed as missing in Southeast Asia who told the committee there is evidence that their sons, fathers and brothers remain alive. Their testimony capped a 10-hour session as the panel wrapped up three days of hearings on the issue.

The Senate Select Committee was formed in July after the public release of a series of photographs that purportedly depict live POWs. Pentagon officials have stated that they have no reason to believe that any missing servicemen remain in Southeast Asia.

Fleckenstein said her son, Navy pilot Lt. Cmdr. Larry J. Stevens of Canoga Park, is one of three men pictured in a black-and-white photograph released last summer. More recently, a Tennessee judge presented Fleckenstein with a color photograph supposedly taken last year of an individual she has identified as her son.

“I believe it is my son,” Fleckenstein told senators looking at an enlargement of the color photo. She said that the photograph has been analyzed three times and that experts agree that the man pictured is Stevens.

Michael Charney, a Colorado State University specialist in identifying human remains and people in photos, announced over the weekend that he had identified the man in the photo as Stevens by comparing it to a picture taken of him before he disappeared.

Fleckenstein read to the committee excerpts from a report by a Defense Intelligence Agency official who analyzed the color photograph: “I cannot say whether or not the . . . purported images show the same man. The men in the images do look somewhat alike.”

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Select Committee Chairman Bob Kerrey (D-Neb.) asked Fleckenstein about her faith in the authenticity of the photographs in light of reports that other alleged pictures of MIAs, believed to be genuine, have turned out to be fraudulent.

Fleckenstein replied, “My grandson took a look at this picture and he disappeared for a while and came out with a picture of Larry’s father, and I was in shock at the complete, total likeness to Larry’s father, who would have been the approximate age that Larry is today. And that certainly was another convincer to me.”

However, she said she was “quite sure that there could be people out there who are working (to exploit) this situation, because we’ve heard of that.”

But Fleckenstein added, “I have to accept that is my son because it is. That is my son. And I’ve been fighting for 22 1/2 years to find that boy, and I know he’s alive.”

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