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Vietnam vet’s dog tags found in Russia, now back home in U.S.

vietnam tags

The late Ron Hepper and his newly returned dog tags.

Ronald Hepper died in 2007 at 58, but last week the Vietnam War veteran’s dog tags finally made it back home, fifty years after they were left on the battle field. The Purple Heart recipient’s widow, Ruth, was handed his tags which had strangely been discovered in Russia.

In a special presentation last week, North Dakota Governor Doug Burgum returned the tags to Ruth. He later wrote in a tweet, “We are forever grateful for his courageous service and sacrifice.”

Ronald Hepper had lost his tags after coming under attack in June 1969, just a few months into his tour. His boots, where he kept a set, were literally blown off his feet by an enemy grenade, and the tags were gone.

He awoke in a hospital, where he spent the next three months. His legs had suffered shrapnel wounds but were fortunately saved by medics. He was awarded the Purple Heart for his injuries.

Gov. Doug Burgum presents Ron Hepper’s military ID tag to his widow, Ruth Hepper of Bismarck, on Wednesday, Sept. 30, at the Capitol in Bismarck. Also pictured are (from left) Maj. Gen. Al Dohrmann, Hepper’s daughter Julie Hornbacher and her husband, Jim, and Ron Hepper’s brother Stanley Hepper and his wife, Kathleen.

Minus his dog tags, he returned home to Isabel, South Dakota, and later moved to Bismarck shortly before his death in January 2007.

Ruth states that although Ronald was a proud Vietnam veteran, he didn’t really talk much about the war or the attack. It had clearly left a mark though, as he had struggled with PTSD.

READ: The faith journey of the famous “napalm girl”

We may never know how the identification ended up in Russia—Ruth believes it was taken as a “souvenir” by a Russian soldier fighting alongside the North Vietnamese. What we do know though is that an eagle-eyed traveling American spotted and purchased it from a street vendor in Moscow. Later on, they took it to the American Embassy, where it began the long journey home.

Eventually, the tags made their way to the Governor’s Office in North Dakota, via the Department of Veterans Affairs in Washington, and the ceremony to return the lost property was arranged.

The governor shared: “We are eternally grateful for the courageous service and sacrifices made by Ron Hepper and all North Dakotans who proudly served their country in the Vietnam War, as well as their families, especially those whose loved ones never came home.

“While we wish we were able to return these tags to Ron himself, we are thankful for the opportunity and tremendous honor to present this keepsake to Ruth on behalf of a grateful state and nation.”

–Wire Services and Metro Voice

 

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