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New Details Expected in Speicher Death Investigation

Family spokesperson Cindy Laquidara says the Pentagon will answer at least one of those questions in the coming weeks - the date of Speicher's death.
"The Pentagon is working on setting the final date-of-death, which is an administrative matter," says Laquidara.
A death certificate has the believed date of Speicher's death, which many understand to be January 17, 1991. But Buddy Harris, Speicher's close friend, believes any date that's released out of Washington at this point would be made purely on "horrendous assumptions" until they know how Speicher died during the first Iraq War.
"I had some of the leading forensics scientists in this nation, not just military, but in the nation, sitting with me in a room, and none of them could come up conclusively with a date-of-death. An actual, firm, absolutely, 'this is when he died,'" says Harris.
He believes knowing how Speicher was killed is paramount to the case. "There is a lot of information and a lot of possibilities for his demise."
But according to Laquidara, there's currently no investigation into Speicher's cause of death.
Harris says there's still a strong effort to close the book on this case. He believes that's because some officials don't want to shine a light on mistakes that were made during the search for Speicher, fearing reputations could be at risk.
Harris believes the real lessons to be learned are from the Bedouins - the nomadic group that travelled the Iraqi desert, and reportedly buried Speicher's body in 1991 after his aircraft crashed. He thinks it's important to understand their culture, so the military doesn't have another case like Speicher's to investigate.
In the meantime, Harris says he's working with Navy Secretary Ray Mabus and Senator Bill Nelson to keep the case open and get more of his questions answered.

Lt. Thomas Buck, spokesperson for the Department of the Navy, says the Department is not releasing any new information regarding Captain Speicher at this time.
Captain Scott Speicher was a United States Navy Pilot. His family moved to Jacksonville when he was a teenager. He was a graduate of Forrest High School and Florida State University. He was married to his wife, Joanne, and they had two young children at the time of his depolyment from Naval Air Station Cecil Field. His death or capture had been debated for years, but his death was not confirmed until August 2, 2009. Speicher was 33-years-old at the time of his disappearance in 1991.
What others are saying
- "Spike"I doubt we will ever know what it cost the US taxpayer to bury the truth about him.
- SpeicherWhat happened to Capt Speicher is not new. For decades the true circumstances of death for Vietnam era POW/MIAs have been ignored in spite of forensic evidence. This evidence in some cases included the governments own reports.
Speicher was not the first serviceman left behind, due to poor decision making.
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