| U.S.
- Russia |
![]() |
Joint
Commission Support |
The Gulag Study

Perm-36 Special Camp,
located in Perm, Russia. This site is now a museum.
Joint Commission
Support Directorate
Gulag Research Group
Defense POW/Missing Personnel Office
This report has been reformatted for displaying on the web.
Third Edition
20 November 2001
U.S.-RUSSIA
JOINT COMMISSION ON POW/MIAs
1745 JEFFERSON
DAVIS HWY, SUITE 800
ARLINGTON, VA 22203
November 29, 2001
We are pleased to present the third edition of "The Gulag Study," a compendium of reports and first-hand accounts asserting that American servicemen were observed in the Soviet camp system or Gulag. This version of the study updates the previous edition, which appeared in June of this year.
Since the study was first released, we have continued our search for witnesses and written records that may ultimately allow us to validate at least some of the substantial number of reports received about US servicemen taken to, and held within, the camps and other detention facilities of the former Soviet Union.
Our staff continues to identify and actively pursue new avenues of investigation. DPMO researchers at the National Archives are combing through thousands of interviews of German and Japanese POWs who were detained in the Soviet Gulag after World War II. Even at this early point in the inquiry, previously unknown information has been acquired about Americans in the Gulag from World War II and the Korean War as well as extensive geographical and administrative data on the Gulag system itself. We expect this to be helpful as we plan for investigative expeditions to former Gulag sites in the Perm region next year.
Recent intensive on-the-ground research in the former Soviet Union has yielded new reports about American military personnel in the Gulag with specific references to secret camps, camp commanders, and former Russian prisoners. One such report provides the basis for an investigative trip to the Russian Republic of Sakha-Yakutia being planned during the first part of 2002. As always, the results of our efforts will appear in subsequent updates and may be viewed on the website of the Defense Prisoner of War/Missing Personnel Office (DPMO).
We are encouraged that family and veterans' organizations remain interested in the program we have begun and are hopeful that the results achieved will prove useful to the overall accounting process.
// Signed //
Norman D. Kass
Executive Secretary
The Gulag Study
Direct any questions or comments concerning this study to:
Major Tim Falkowski, Project
Manager
Phone: (703) 602-2202, extension 209
Email: Tim.Falkowski@osd.mil
or
Chief Petty Officer Michael
Allen, Gulag Study Analyst
Phone: (703) 602-2202, extension 235
Email: Michael.Allen@osd.mil
Gulag Study Contents
LOCATION: Lubyanka
SUMMARY: In 1947 while in pre-trial confinement in Potsdam, a Polish witness
shared a cell with a U.S. Army sergeant, reportedly a gunner. The witness
believed that the sergeant had unintentionally entered the Soviet Zone in
Berlin by car and had been immediately arrested. The source described the
American as a sturdy fellow, whose father was a farmer. The American gave
the source an overcoat. They spoke German, although both spoke it very poorly.
They met again at the Lubyanka Prison in Moscow at the turn of 1948.
LOCATION: Monino Air Force Academy
SUMMARY: During a series of interviews in 1996, a Soviet veteran who lived
in Minsk claimed to have seen an U.S. POW in May or June 1953. The POW reportedly
was a Korean War F-86D pilot whose plane had been forced to land. The pilot
landed his plane undamaged, was captured, and his aircraft taken to Moscow.
The incident occurred in the late spring of 1953. According to the witness--who
served in An Dun, China, from December 1952 through February 1954--the pilot
was sent to Moscow the day after his forced landing, "because Stalin
wanted to speak with him." The witness said that his commander, Colonel
Ivan Nikolayevich Kozhedub, interrogated the pilot. He believed the U.S. POW
was not injured. The witness stated that the late General Vasiliy Kuzmich
Sidorenkov had a picture of the American POW, which Sidorenkov showed to him
years ago, declaring, "that's our American." He stated that the
U.S. POW depicted in the photo was white, with light brown hair and blue or
light brown eyes, was about five feet seven inches tall, and had a two and
half inch scar above the right eye. The witness revealed that this pilot later
became an instructor and taught at the Monino Air Force Academy in Moscow
from 1953-58. The U.S. POW did not speak Russian and served at Monino under
an assumed Russian name. He did not know the name and could not recall any
other details about the U.S. POW. The U.S. POW primarily taught air battle
techniques and tactics, and assisted the Soviets in figuring out a U.S. radar
sight (radio-lokatsionniy pritsel).
LOCATION: Krasnaya Presnya Prison
SUMMARY: In a letter to President Nixon, repatriated American John Noble reported
that, inscribed in the wall of Krasnaya Presnya Prison in Moscow, he saw the
name of a Major Roberts or Robbins, with his American address and the inscription,
"I am sick and don't expect to live through this...." Mr. Noble
had earlier reported this was also inscribed on a cell wall in the transit
prison in Orsha, Byelorussia, where he was imprisoned prior to his confinement
at Krasnaya Presnya. [Major Frank A. Roberts, and Captains Robert Roberts
and Edward Robbins, are among the 125 service members missing from WWII with
the last name of Roberts or Robbins.]
LOCATION: Vladimir Prison
SUMMARY: A United Press release, dated 1 September 1955, reported that nine
Austrians and one Italian were released from a Russian prison camp. The returnees
reported that U.S. servicemen Wilfred Cumish [returned], Sidney Sparks [returned],
Frederick Hopkins [returned], and Grisham [not returned] were in the same
camp. [Captain David Howard Grisham, USAF, went missing from the Korean War
on September 3, 1950].
LOCATION: Dubravlag
SUMMARY: Several repatriated Iranian witnesses claimed that, at this location
in 1953, they knew of an American, a Colonel Jackson, who had been reportedly
kidnapped by the Soviets in Berlin.
LOCATION: Potma Camp No. 18
SUMMARY: An Estonian witness alleged that he met an U.S. POW from Korea in
1952. The POW's first name was Gary or Harry. The POW was still in camp when
the witness left in the autumn of 1953.
LOCATION: Potma Camp No. 19
SUMMARY: A Polish witness was the chief of a work brigade in Camp No. 19 in
Potma, working primarily in the forest. He claimed there were a few Americans
among the 17 nationalities in his brigade.
LOCATION: Yavas
SUMMARY: A former German POW met an American prisoner, John Hansen, in August
1955, after having previously heard about him from another prisoner as early
as 1953. John Hansen spoke both German and Russian and was described as five
feet, six inches tall, medium build with brown hair. [SGT John Hansen, GM2C
John Hansen, and 1LT John Hanson are missing from WWII. These three are among
the 88 service members with the last name of Hansen or Hanson missing from
WWII.]
LOCATION: Novocherkassk Camp
No. 1/421
SUMMARY: During a 1947 interview, a former German POW reported that he met
two American soldiers in POW Hospital 5351 located at Novocherkassk in September
1945. The Americans stayed at the hospital until February 1946, when they
were transferred to an engine factory in the same town. The witness provided
the names of five other sources who he claimed would be able to verify this
information. The one source contacted did in fact verify the account as provided
by the witness.
LOCATION: Novosibirsk Transit
Prison
SUMMARY: During an interview in 1993, a witness in Lithuania described an
encounter with Americans at the Novosibirsk Transit Prison around June 1952.
The witness stated there were two American pilots in the group of prisoners
brought into his small room. The other prisoners (two or three others) were
German. The Americans reportedly told him that they had been shot down in
Korea. They were dressed in khaki shirts and trousers with no belts. The first
American told the source that he was a Captain in the U.S. Air Force. The
source could only remember that the Captain was tall and had a red beard.
He could not recall any details about the second individual.
LOCATION: Kirov
SUMMARY: Repatriated American William Marchuk received information from a
German POW who was imprisoned in the Kirov camp. The German stated that he
was in the camp together with nine American POWs, all Captains and Majors
who were Korean War aviators.
LOCATION: Inta
SUMMARY: A Ukrainian witness in Topol-3 near Dnepropetrovsk stated that he
was interned in Inta Camp No. 6 from 1949 through 1955. During that time,
the camp held many foreigners of various nationalities. In 1952, a man who
claimed to be an American, referred to as Leonid Teryashchenko (a pseudonym),
was transferred to Inta. Teryashchenko's real name was never disclosed. His
prisoner number had an additional slash and digit following the usual letter
and three-digit sequence of the other prisoners. The witness frequently talked
to Teryashchenko, who told the witness that he was imprisoned for political
reasons. The witness described Teryashchenko as an athletic man with a large
frame, a former boxer, approximately 30-33 years old. In late 1953 or early
1954 Teryashchenko committed suicide to avoid further torture. Teryashchenko
overpowered one of the guards, took his weapon, and shot himself in the mouth.
He was buried in a common grave in the camp (exact location unknown).
LOCATION: Inta
SUMMARY: A Polish witness recalled meeting two Americans in Camp No. 3 in
Inta in 1954. They worked in his brigade, which was led by Wladyslaw Szyszko.
He related that while they were building a bridge one of the Americans jumped
into the Kosju River and drowned.
LOCATION: Inta
SUMMARY: A Russian witness claimed that, from 1956 until 1975, the KGB maintained
a facility on the shore of the river Inta. In 1965, people were brought to
Inta from Laos, Cambodia and Vietnam, where they were imprisoned and killed,
and their records burned in the boiler room in the eastern suburb on Shakhtnaya
Street. More than 1,000 people ended up in the Inta prison, both American
enlisted personnel and officers. The witness claimed that this information
could be confirmed by Petr Ivanovich Kuznetsov, who reportedly worked as a
driver for the MVD (Ministry of Internal Afffairs) for twenty years. And now
lives on Mir Street in Inta. Efforts to contact Mr. Kuznetsov during a visit
to Inta in October 2000 proved unsuccessful as Mr. Kuznetsov claimed that
he was too ill to meet with USRJC representatives who traveled to Inta to
speak with him.
LOCATION: Inta
SUMMARY: A Polish witness reported two Americans in a camp in 1949-1950.
LOCATION: Inta Minlag
SUMMARY: A Russian witness indicated that she had spent four years in the
Inta "Minlag" camp complex (1952-1956). During that time, she heard
reports of two American flyers in the Inta camp complex in the early 1950s,
although she did not see them herself. Some of the women who worked in the
central hospital there said that there were many foreigners in the camp, including
two American pilots. According to these reports, the two men were shot down
or forced down over Germany after having strayed over Soviet-occupied territory.
One of the two was white, while the other had black skin (chernokozhiy). The
witness said that these women told her that the reputed Americans had been
imprisoned since 1946.
LOCATION: Inta Mining Camp No.
15
SUMMARY: A Russian stated that he knew of two Americans in the Inta Gulag
system who were detained at Mining Camp Number 15 (circa 1950). The two men
were U.S. service members and went by the names of John and Michael.
LOCATION: Pechora
SUMMARY: A Lithuanian witness claimed to have met an American Major or Colonel
on February 15 or 16, 1950. The American reportedly was captured in the Ukraine
during WWII. The witness saw him on two occasions before being sent into exile.
LOCATION: Pechora Kozhva (Koschwa)
SUMMARY: A German POW reportedly had direct contact with a U.S. Air Force
Captain described as being five feet eleven inches tall, 28-33 years old,
with reddish hair. The witness last saw him on January 5, 1950. The American
claimed that at the end of WWII he was arrested for participating in an altercation
at a Moscow restaurant. He was sentenced to ten years in prison. The American
spoke broken German.
LOCATION: Vorkuta
SUMMARY: A witness met and spoke with a group of eleven American prisoners
in December 1946, at Vorkuta. All were flyers, one was black, and they included
both officers and enlisted men. They were kept in a small barracks separated
from the rest of the camp and surrounded by barbed wire. The witness claimed
these might have been part of a group of American pilots coerced into staying
in the Soviet Union after WWII. These pilots claimed to have flown missions
against Nazi targets using airfields in the Soviet Union.
LOCATION: Vorkuta
SUMMARY: Repatriated American John Noble reported that shortly after his arrival
at Camp No. 3 he had spoken with a Yugoslavian national. The Yugoslavian told
him that several months before, an American Navy reconnaissance plane had
been downed by the Soviets over the Baltic Sea and that eight of the ten-crew
members had survived. The survivors were being held in the Vorkuta area. However,
they were told that the United States Government had accepted the official
Soviet statement declaring them dead. This effectively doomed their chances
of ever returning to America. Noble was never able to identify the survivors
by name. However, he heard repeatedly from other inmates who were transferred
from one camp to another that Americans were held in the same camps from which
the transferees had come.
LOCATION: Vorkuta
SUMMARY: A German witness reported meeting U.S. Air Force member Bob (last
name unknown), in July 1951. Bob had been stationed in Berlin as a U.S. Air
Force bombardier. While visiting his girlfriend in the Soviet Sector in 1948
or 1949, he was arrested and sent to Vorkuta. He previously lived in Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania, and spoke only English. Bob was 30-35 years old, five feet eight
inches tall, and had dark hair.
LOCATION: Vorkuta
SUMMARY: A source who had been imprisoned in Vorkuta reported meeting an American
with the last name "Cox," whose physical description matched that
of a West Point cadet named Richard Alvin Cox, who mysteriously disappeared
from the U.S. Military Academy on January 14, 1950.
However, further investigation and analysis of the primary source document (NBG Team, 7051st Air INTSERON, 7050th Air INTSERGU Air Intelligence Information Report IR-255-56 dated December 18, 1956) indicated that the individual named "Cox" encountered by the source was probably Private Homer H. Cox, a U.S. military policeman who was detained by Soviet authorities in East Germany in September 1949. Private Cox was detained in Vorkuta and released on December 29, 1953. He returned to his home state of Oklahoma, and died of pneumonia in 1954.
The primary source document stated: COX, first name unknown, from CHICHASHA (3501N/9755E) OKLAHOMA, 30-35 years old, blond, five feet eight inches tall. Source heard from fellow prisoners that this man deserted his military unit in West Germany.
LOCATION: Vorkuta
SUMMARY: A Lithuanian witness in Vilnius stated that while a prisoner in a
camp in Vorkuta, he had met a prisoner who claimed to be a U.S. WWII pilot
named John.
LOCATION: Vorkuta
SUMMARY: A woman from Kiev reported that during interviews with former prisoners
in the Vorkuta and Berlag camps, several claimed to have seen American pilots.
The pilots were shot down during the Korean War.
LOCATION: Vorkuta
SUMMARY: The son of a Soviet engineer stationed at Vorkuta stated that of
the several thousand persons in that camp complex, there were two black American
soldiers, an American Major, and several British citizens, as well as "other
Europeans."
LOCATION: Vorkuta
SUMMARY: In 1962, while living in Vorkuta, a Russian journalist stated that
he conducted an expose on the KGB presumably to highlight their good work
at protecting the borders of the Soviet Union. To present his findings, the
reporter held a press conference with several KGB officers in attendance.
The journalist asked the officers whether there were any U.S. servicemen in
Vorkuta. He reported that one KGB officer commented, "Of course we have
American prisoners from the Korean War here in Vorkuta." When asked to
expound on this, the officer demurred, indicating that he did not want to
discuss the issue any further.
LOCATION: Vorkuta Camp No. 6
SUMMARY: A German witness reported that he knew a U.S. Major Schwartz from
1951 until 1952. Schwartz had been stationed in Frankfurt, Germany, when he
was kidnapped by Soviet Security police in Kassel, West Germany, in 1949.
The American, last seen by the witness in 1952, spoke Russian and English.
LOCATION: Vorkuta Camp No. 9
SUMMARY: An Austrian journalist imprisoned in various camps from 1948 until
1954, claimed to have known a naturalized American, Colonel Brandenfels, in
Vorkuta in 1951. (Brandenfels was reportedly the name he used before becoming
an American citizen.) The American had been stationed in Berlin after WWII
and was picked up in a bar in the Soviet Zone.
LOCATION: Vorkuta Coal Mine
No. 1
SUMMARY: A Polish witness arrived at Vorkuta Coal Mine No. 1 in 1950. Other
prisoners showed him an American Colonel. He appeared about 60 years old,
was quite tall, broad-shouldered, and pale. He wore a quilted jacket and did
not converse with other prisoners. After some time the camp administration
summoned the Colonel, returned his gold ring and watch, and released him from
Vorkuta.
LOCATION: Vorkuta Coal Mine
No. 1
SUMMARY: A Polish witness claimed to have met an American pilot in the summer
of 1946. They could not understand each other but the witness was able to
understand that the pilot "fell down" from a plane. He was tall
(72 inches), fine-figured, dark-skinned, with an oval face. He looked robust.
The witness saw him in the camp for a few days, and did not know what became
of the American.
LOCATION: Vorkuta Coal Mine
No. 1
SUMMARY: A Polish source who was at this camp in 1954 heard that an American
Colonel downed over East Germany (near Berlin) was among a group of prisoners
who arrived that year.
LOCATION: Vorkuta Coal Mine
No. 6
SUMMARY: A Polish witness recalled that an American arrived at the camp around
June of 1953. Other prisoners told the witness that the American was a pilot
from a spy plane downed by the Soviets. The American was approximately 40
years old, over 72 inches high with an oval face and a shaved head, wearing
a quilted jacket (like everybody else). His Russian was very poor. The witness
saw him while the Polish prisoners were being prepared for release.
LOCATION: Vorkuta Coal Mine
No. 6
SUMMARY: In 1954 this Polish witness came into contact with an American and
had a short conversation with him (The source's English was poor and the American
could not speak Russian). The American stated that he was a Colonel in the
U.S. Army, captured in Vienna by Soviet agents. He looked about 40 years old,
of medium height, thickset, with dark or auburn hair. The witness left the
camp in 1953 [sic] and did not know what happened to the American.
LOCATION: Vorkuta Coal Mine
No. 7
SUMMARY: A Polish witness reported that he met an American Colonel, kidnapped
in Berlin. The American recounted that at first he had been sent to Moscow
(Lubyanka Prison). He was originally sentenced to death, but the sentence
was somehow commuted to 25 yearsÕ imprisonment. He was sent to Vorkuta
and worked in Coal Mine No. 7, where the source first met him. The witness
met him a second time between May and June 1954 in prison in Taishet, while
being moved from Taishet to Krasnoyarsk. The American told the witness that,
after the uprising in Coal Mine No. 7 in Vorkuta in 1953, he had been sentenced
to death because of his participation in the uprising. However his sentence
was commuted to 10 years in a camp somewhere in the Irkutsk District. The
American was of average height with blond hair and was about 45 years old.
LOCATION: Vorkuta Mine No. 9
SUMMARY: A German witness met a U.S. Navy Ensign named Sobeloff [Sobelev],
reportedly captured in China in 1948, when Communist forces took control of
the country. Sobeloff claimed to have been the Captain of a U.S. vessel at
the time of his capture. He was Russian by birth, but a U.S. citizen. He was
last seen at Vorkuta Mine No. 9 in November 1955.
LOCATION: Vorkuta Coal Mine
No. 11
SUMMARY: A Polish witness was moved from Coal Mine No. 9/10 to Coal Mine No.
11 in Vorkuta. While at Coal Mine No. 11, he came into close contact with
an American officer named Langier, who had been captured by the Soviets somewhere
in Eastern Asia and sentenced for espionage. Langier worked at the baths.
He spoke some Polish and claimed he had some Polish friends in the USA. The
source believed Langier was from Alabama. He was tall, fair-haired and very
friendly. Langier sometimes shared food with the source. He also helped him
transfer back to Coal Mine No. 9/10 (Langier had a good relationship with
the camp doctor). When the witness was released in 1954, the camp at Coal
Mine No. 11 no longer existed. The witness assumed that Langier had been moved
somewhere else earlier. [There are at least 39 service members missing from
WWII with the last name of Lang, Lange, or Langer.]
LOCATION: Vorkuta Coal Mine
No. 16
SUMMARY: In 1951 or 1952 a Polish witness remembered meeting a young American
20-25 years old, thin, medium-sized, who spoke Russian and worked at the baths.
The witness believed he had been captured in Germany. The witness also heard
rumors about an American plane downed over Latvia near the town of Limbava,
and that the crew was imprisoned in one of the camps.
LOCATION: Vorkuta Coal Mine
No. 40
SUMMARY: A Polish witness recalled that in early September of 1951 or 1952--after
some kind of Russian-American incident in Berlin--a large number of Germans
were brought to Vorkuta. They came mostly from Berlin (both East and West)
and around 20 ended up in Coal Mine No. 40. One German from this group was
about 45 years old, a doctor and disabled soldier who had a platinum plate
in his skull. He related that during a rail trip to Vorkuta he had met in
the carriage an American Major who had been captured on the street in Berlin
near the East-West border. He believed there were a total of three Americans
in this convoy, and that, at a transfer point, they were directed to other
coal mines in Vorkuta.
LOCATION: Vorkuta Pit No. 40
SUMMARY: Austrian witnesses reportedly met an American who immigrated to the
U.S. as a child. His adopted name was Bizet. The Soviets referred to him by
his birth name, Wasiljevski. He was supposedly taken prisoner by the Soviets
in 1945 in Korea where he was serving with the U.S. Navy. The Soviets reportedly
did not recognize him as a U.S. citizen.
LOCATION: Vorkuta Transit Camp
No. 58
SUMMARY: A former German POW claimed to have had direct contact with an Army
or Air Force Colonel (five feet eleven inches tall with dark blond hair) during
the week of August 21-25, 1949. The U.S. Colonel spoke perfect German. He
claimed to have been dropped behind German lines during WWII to conduct espionage
and was captured in East Germany.
LOCATION: Vorkuta Distribution
Camp No. 61
SUMMARY: A former German POW reported direct contact with a U.S. Major (five
feet nine inches tall with blue-gray eyes, moustache, and slim build) who
claimed he had been kidnapped in 1945 while the Americans were still at the
Elbe River. The Soviets sentenced him to 25 years for espionage. He wore an
American uniform.
LOCATION: Vorkuta
SUMMARY: While detained in labor camp "OLP 9" in 1953, a former
German POW heard from a driver that approximately 19 miles north of Vorkuta
was a Camp of Silence (the inmates of the camp did not have to work, and were
not eligible for mail privileges). According to the driver, who was an ex-prisoner
engaged in hauling supplies to various camps, this Camp of Silence held Americans
and British captured in Korea.
LOCATION: Vorkuta
SUMMARY: While detained in labor camp "OLP 9" in 1952, a former
German POW heard from camp guards and officers rumors of Americans detained
in Vorkuta. In early 1952, the campÕs security officer, Feodeor Nikolayevich
Kolesnikov, told the source that he had seen the American officers. The source
also spoke with the Chief of State Security for Vorkuta, Mishanov, who acknowledged
KolesnikovÕs statement. The source reported that seven American military
prisoners were reportedly detained in the Vorkut Mekhanicheskiy Zavod (The
Vorkuta Mechanical Factory) Camp Complex-one Lieutenant Colonel, two Majors,
two Captains, and two civilian engineers. Another American prisoner was detained
in Coal Mine Eight. Source remembers the latter AmericanÕs name as
Johny Thomson or Johny Chemson. This American prisoner told the source that
he had been the first engineer of an American vessel anchored at Port Author,
USSR (no timeframe reported). The engineer went on a short errand ashore,
was arrested for illegally entering the harbor area, and sentenced to six
to seven years in the Vorkuta Gulag. Source doubted whether the Soviet authorities
would release him after he completed his sentence. He believed that the engineer
would have been forcibly settled somewhere in the Urals. Source also noted
that the Soviet authorities seemed proud of having American officers in custody.
LOCATION: Molotov (Perm)
SUMMARY: A CIA report dated September 2, 1952 reported on the location of
Soviet transit camps for Prisoners of War from Korea. Following are excerpts
from the 1952 report:
LOCATION: Kirovskiy
SUMMARY: In his memoirs (provided to the Russian Side in November 1999), a
former Soviet citizen quoted seven people who claim to have seen Americans
in Kirovskiy. Excerpts from his memoirs:
Foster
1LT Robert Foster, SGT Elmer Foster,
and PFC Robert Foster are missing
Hatch
SFC Robert Hatch is missing
Leon
PFC Chan Jay Park Kim assumed the
name "George Leon" upon his capture in order to disguise his
Korean heritage...he remains missing
Miller
There are 42 missing Millers
Davis
There are 39 missing Davis
Johnson, Hubert
CPL Herbert Johnson is missing
Morin
CAPT Arthur Morin and CPL Fernand
Morin is missing
Larson
PFC Gerald Larson is missing
Boyar
Cpl Andrew Boyer and CPL William
Boyer are missing
Fisher
There are 8 missing Fishers
Helfand
PFC Osvaldo Galvan is missing
Kaiser
MSGT George Kyzer is missing
LOCATION: Norilsk
SUMMARY: A Polish witness heard from fellow prisoners that two Americans,
probably pilots, were in the camp. They were described as being around 30-35
years old.
LOCATION: Norilsk Camp No. 4
SUMMARY: A Polish witness claimed to have worked with 36-38 American POWs
from the Korean War (pilots shot down near Vladivostok) in the early 50s.
He recalled the name of one of the prisoners, Scott, but was unsure if this
was the first or last name. [There are 21 service members missing from the
Korean War and 96 service members missing from WWII with the last name Scott.
Many others have a first name Scott.]
LOCATION: Norilsk Camp No. 4
or No. 5
SUMMARY: A Polish witness claimed to have been in the camp with an American
for about one year. The American was pudgy and fair-haired, and did not speak
Russian.
LOCATION: Norilsk Camp No. 5
SUMMARY: A Polish witness met an American or English pilot, probably a Captain,
in Norilsk in the first half of 1953. This pilot carried out reconnaissance
flights during the Korean War, and due to bad weather and instrument failure,
landed at Dalny, USSR. He was arrested and sentenced on espionage charges.
According to the witness, the pilot was approximately 30 years old, tall,
dark- haired, and looked healthy. Under his prison clothes he wore an "English"
military blouse. The source did not know the pilot's eventual fate. In May-June
1953 the camp inmates staged an uprising, and in July, the witness, one of
the revolt's leaders, was transported to Kolyma, where he stayed until 1956.
LOCATION: Norilsk Camp No. 9,
Cement Plant No. 5
SUMMARY: A witness in Lithuania said that he was working with the third camp
division near Cement Plant No. 5 at Norilsk Camp No. 9 in 1953. Camp gossip
alleged that a heavily guarded corner facility in the camp was for American
POWs from Korea. The witness observed these prisoners from a distance of about
110 yards. They were young white males dressed in prison garb. He felt it
was significant that during the prison uprisings in May-June 1954 these special
prisoners were quickly removed. He had no idea what happened to them.
LOCATION: Norilsk Dudinka Transit
Camp
SUMMARY: A Lithuanian witness reported seeing American WWII officers at the
Norilsk Dudinka transit camp in August of 1946.
LOCATION: Rybak
SUMMARY: In his memoirs (provided to the Russian Side in November 1999), a
source wrote that in the very beginning of 1953, he was sent to handle an
emergency situation at the northern mining enterprise called Rybak. One of
the technical experts that he worked with was a demolition-qualified inmate:
tall, exhausted by hunger and the Arctic, with a very characteristic, slightly
elongated artistic face. His unnaturally protruding gray eyes in sockets sunken
from emaciation revealed someone ill with exophthalmic goiter. In an accent
clearly that of an English speaker, he identified himself as a citizen of
the United States of America, Allied Officer Dale.
In Norilsk, many years later, a geologist, who had worked with the witness in Udereya at the time in question, related that many of the Americans "who had fallen into our hands in 1945 from the liberated Fascist camps were held in Rybak and probably perished there...." [LT Harvey Dale and LT William Dale are both missing from WWII.]
During a visit to Krasnoyarsk in September 2001, the Director of the human-rights organization "Memorial" confirmed the existence of Rybak. He commented that Rybak was a top-secret uranium mine located on the Leningradskaya River. Unlike the majority of Gulag camps, Rybak was not subordinate to the MVD. It is not known what entity controlled Rybak, but it is known that several Soviet geologists worked at the camp. The camp was centered on a mining shaft, and the uranium ore was placed into river ships for transport. Because the camp produced very little uranium it was eventually destroyed and traces of the camp removed. No known archival records or memoirs of the camp exist. The Memorial director knew of the camp only through acquaintances who served as geologists for the Soviet Union.
LOCATION: unknown
SUMMARY: While serving his sentence in the Krasnoyarsk Kray in 1949-1950,
a Russian witness met with Japanese and Korean prisoners of war and conversed
with them. They told him that, along with them, several Americans arrived
at the labor camp sub-sector (Lagpunkt) who had been prisoners of war
of either the Japanese or the Koreans; later they (Americans, Japanese, Koreans)
all became prisoners of the Russians.
LOCATION: Camp No. 19
SUMMARY: A Ukrainian witness was sent to the Irkutsk Oblast in 1959. During
a brief stay in Camp No. 4, he heard rumors that Americans were being held
in Camp No. 19, about five miles away. He said that he heard that the part
of Camp No. 19 which housed the Americans was a particularly high-security
zone, surrounded by an eight-yard fence, with several feet of barbed wire.
After having been caught stealing bread, he was sent to Camp No. 19 in March 1959, and was immediately thrown into the "BUR" (Barak Usilennogo Rezhima - Reinforced Security Barracks), located near the bathhouse and guard tower. Inside he was thrown on top of the badly bloodied bodies of two men lying on a makeshift table. He said that lying next to the bodies were seven gold teeth and part of an artificial jaw. It was obvious that the men had been beaten and had their teeth knocked out. He said that he could not recall whether the teeth were completely covered with gold, or just the crowns. The guards told him that the bodies were those of American officers and that the same would happen to him if he did not obey the rules. The witness said that it was impossible to discern the color of their skin or even guess at their age, due to the ferocity of the beatings. He said that he was sent off to wash up and that when he returned, the bodies were no longer there. He later heard that the bodies were buried by the fourth guard tower, and the prisoners' clothes were doused with gasoline and burned. The witness added that he had heard rumors that there were another 18 Americans housed in the camp, aside from these two. He said that these prisoners were gradually killed off between May and July 1959. He claimed that approximately once a week, one of these prisoners was taken out, forced to dig his own grave, stripped, and then shot. The camp guards told him that these victims were U.S. aircrews that had been taken prisoner in Korea. They were buried outside the camp, near the guard tower, separately from the other prisoners. He added that this was not in the local cemetery, which was also located just outside the camp.
The witness said that he could not recall the camp commandant's name. He recalled the surnames of two camp guards, Popov and Ivanov, but could not remember their first names or patronymics.
LOCATION: Taishet
SUMMARY: A former German POW reported direct contact with U.S. Army Captain
Johnny Anderson from 1951-1953. Captain Anderson was reportedly stationed
in Berlin in 1946, and was arrested while drunk in the Soviet sector. The
source believed he might have been in the Air Corps. [Captains John R. Anderson
and John A. Anderson are missing from WWII. There are an additional four Captains
missing with the last name of Anderson.]
LOCATION: Taishet Camp No. 20,
Farm No. 25
SUMMARY: A Japanese returnee reported that in the period of 1949-1950 he had
direct contact with an American flyer, about 40 years old, tall, with a ruddy
complexion. The flyer was shot down over the Baltic States while on an aerial
reconnaissance mission and sentenced to 20 years. He was burned in the crash,
leaving scars on his right cheek and left leg, necessitating the use of a
cane. He spoke some Russian.
LOCATION: Taishet Special Camp
No. 6
SUMMARY: A Latvian witness said that he had knowledge of three U.S. POWs in
Taishet camps from the period 1949-1951.
He met the first American in 1950, in Taishet Special Camp No. 6, where he worked as a barber. This camp held primarily French, Indians, and people from the Baltic States. The American was a U.S. military officer taken in 1949 from Austria. During his capture, he had been hit on the head, resulting in a skull fracture. He was Caucasian, about five foot nine inches tall, had light brown hair, blue eyes, was 30 years old and from New Jersey. He was at the camp until 1951, when he was released to exile in Krasnoyarskiy Kray.
The witness saw a second Caucasian American in Special Camp No. 6 during the summer of 1951, but does not know if he was civilian or military. This individual was either brought in blind, or simulated blindness, and was approximately 30 years old. The American escaped, and his fate is unknown.
The witness saw a third American in Special Camp No. 6, who was Caucasian, and around 40 years old. The American was transferred to another camp. The new camp and the fate of the American are unknown.
The witness also cited rumors at the time of his captivity that at least some of the crew from the U.S. aircraft shot down on 8 April, 1950, were taken alive and sent to camps.
LOCATION: Taishet-Bratsk
SUMMARY: A Polish witness claimed that at the end of the summer of 1951 or
1952, an American escaped from Camp No. 19 at Czuna (Chuna), on the Taishet
- Bratsk railway, 90 miles from Taishet.
LOCATION: unknown
SUMMARY: A resident of Irkutsk claimed his mother had seen an American prisoner
in March 1946, while working as a porter on a train carrying NKVD prisoners
from the Far East. The porters were ordered to bury eight of the prisoners
who were believed dead, but one of the eight was still breathing so she took
him in. He died a week later, but before he died he indicated he was an American.
The source believed his name was something like, "Fred Kolin or Kollinz."
The American drew a picture indicating an aircraft being shot down and three
people, possibly bailing out of the aircraft. [There are three Fred Collins
missing from WWII. There are an additional 89 service members with the last
name of Collins.]
LOCATION: Taishet Taishet
Labor Camp No. 4
SUMMARY: In February 1954 a repatriated German commented during a U.S. Air
Force debriefing that he met four U.S. servicemen in the summer of 1947 at
a sub-camp of Taishet Labor Camp No. 4.
For two days in July 1947, the source was billeted in a sub-camp of Taishet Labor Camp No. 4. The camp was located in the forest 34 miles east of Taishet, and consisted of two 2.5 by 1.5 mile compounds which housed thousands of penal laborers of various nationalities. While there the source met four Americans between the ages of 28 and 36. He described them as over five feet nine inches tall and broad-shouldered with close-cropped hair. They wore khaki denims with a pocket on the trouser. The Americans, the source and some Latvian prisoners were all able to communicate with one another through their broken German. The Americans told the source that they were members of the American Air Force who had been stationed in Vienna. In 1946 Soviet soldiers arrested them at the Vienna Prater Park. They were transported to Moscow and tried for espionage. While in Moscow they where kept in underground cells, repeatedly beaten, and interrogated. The Soviets sentenced them to 25 years in a labor camp. At the end of 1946 they were transferred to Taishet Labor Camp No. 4. The source was unable to give any names, but made it a point to keep track of the Americans through fellow prisoners who worked on the Taishet-Bratsk railroad line. He was certain that the Americans were still working on the railroad line when he left Taishet in February 1950.
LOCATION: Vikhorevka (southwest
of the city of Bratsk)
SUMMARY: A former Gulag prisoner and ethnic Estonian source reported that
while detained in the village of Vikhorevka in the zone reserved for foreigners,
he met an American serviceman named Thomas (last name unknown). Thomas said
that he was a U.S. pilot from the Korean War. The source reported that Thomas
was 35 years old when he met him in 1953. Thomas was five feet five inches
to five feet seven inches tall and walked with a limp. Thomas was assigned
to work on the camp water tower.
LOCATION: Bulun
SUMMARY: On October 15, 1957, a Polish witness visited the American Consulate
in Strasbourg, France. He stated he was held in a prison camp in Bulun until
July 1957 and reported seeing the following Americans:
Watson,
an American professor of physics captured in Vienna,
Dick Rozbicki, an American soldier captured during the Korean War,
Stanley Warner, an American soldier captured during the Korean War, and
Jan Sorrow, an American soldier captured during the Korean War.
LOCATION: Bulun Camp No. 217
SUMMARY: On September 20, 1957, two Polish witnesses visited the American
Consulate in Genoa, Italy. Both men claimed to have been WWII POWs held captive
in Bulun Camp No. 217. They had escaped on May 6, 1957. They claimed to have
made their way across the USSR, Rumania, and Yugoslavia, entering Italy on
September 18, 1957. They reported that two men who claimed to be American
army officers captured during the Korean War had been transferred to Bulun
Camp No. 217 from another camp on July 24, 1955.
The men were: Stanley Rosbicki, approximately 24 years old, of Buffalo, New York and Jack Watson, 38 or 39, of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Both were infantry Lieutenants.
LOCATION: Bulun Camp No. 307
SUMMARY: On September 5, 1960, a Polish witness visited the American Embassy,
Brussels, Belgium. He stated he had been imprisoned in Bulun Camp No. 307
for seven and a half years and was released on May 1, 1960. He reported seeing
two U.S. Army personnel captured in Korea: Ted Watson, an infantry lieutenant,
and Fred Rosbiki, a commando or paratroop sergeant.
LOCATION: Bulun Camp No. 315
SUMMARY: A Catholic priest visited the U.S. Embassy in Paris on July 11, 1958
to report an interview he had recently conducted with a former Polish Gulag
prisoner. The prisoner told the priest that he had recently escaped from North
Siberia where he had been held in Bulun Camp No. 315. He claimed to have been
acquainted with two Americans in the same camp: a chaplain, John Westley,
captured in Korea in 1952, and a lieutenant, Stanley Rosbicki, from New York.
The witness further advised the priest that the two Americans, who appeared
to be in good health, had requested that he convey this information to the
American authorities for transmittal to their families.
LOCATION: Yakutsk
SUMMARY: A CIA report dated September 2, 1952 reported on the location of
Soviet transit camps for Prisoners of War from Korea. Excerpts from the 1952
report:
LOCATION: Bulun
SUMMARY: A Sakha-Yakutian government representative reported that her grandmother
lived in Bulun at the end of World War II and worked as a seamstress in the
Bulun Gulag. In the late 1940Õs, her grandmother routinely met American,
Lithuanian, Estonian, Polish, and Finish prisoners of war. The source reported
that her grandmother kept a diary, which documented her time in the Gulag,
and her acquaintenances with Americans. The Bulun Gulag, located at the mouth
of the Lena River (N 70º 44.280' E 127º 21.281') was a fishing camp--male
prisoners worked in the fishing industry and the female prisoners sewed clothes
and prison uniforms. Today nothing is left of the camp except for an underground
fish storage cell. The sourceÕs grandmother died in 1996.
LOCATION: Chita
SUMMARY: A CIA report dated September 2, 1952 reported on the location of
Soviet transit camps for Prisoners of War from Korea. Following are excerpts
from the 1952 report:
LOCATION: Magadan Berlag
SUMMARY: A Ukrainian witness from Gribenko was transferred from Vanino Bay
to Magadan Berlag in 1950, where he remained until his release in 1960. The
witness stated that in the summer of 1954 a large group of foreign prisoners,
perhaps as many as 2000, were brought to Magadan prison. This group included
three Americans. When asked how he knew they were Americans, he replied that
it was common knowledge, and everyone knew it. The Americans were in regular
prison garb, but upon arrival at the Berlag were ordered to remove their prison
numbers from their shirts and hats. While working as a medic in the camp,
he was asked to examine one of the Americans for tropical skin ulcers. Due
to the color of the man's skin and the thickness of his lips, the witness
thinks this American was a Mulatto. When asked if he had talked with the individual,
the witness stated that he had not because it was strictly forbidden. He went
on to say that the three prisoners were young, all had brown hair, and all
appeared to be in good health.
LOCATION: Mokhoplit village
SUMMARY: On 29 March 1996, an interview was conducted with a Russian living
in Yekaterinburg, who spent from 1952-1970 in various Gulags, to include Kolomna,
Indigirka, and Chukhotka. He claimed to have seen an American citizen in 1956/57
in the Magadan Oblast, at Mokhoplit village, in the Tentiskiy gold mining
region. This U.S. citizen, Azat Tigranovich Petrosian, was born in Armenia
in the 1920s, and somehow wound up in a Nazi POW camp that was liberated by
the Soviets. The Soviets refused to repatriate him and sent him to the Gulag.
The source did not know Petrosian's eventual fate.
LOCATION: Myaundzha (near Susuman)
SUMMARY: On 12 August 1996, a witness living in Moscow delivered a written
response to the Radio Liberty program, "Americans in the Gulag,"
being played on Radio Liberty/Voice of America. She had worked at the Directorate
of the PTU (Professional Technical Academy) Energostroy for the electrical
power station in Myaundzha, Magadan Oblast, from 1955-63, then in Magadan
until 1965, when she moved to Moscow. In the letter, the witness told of a
Rudolf Martinovich Benush (1917-1995), who allegedly served as a U.S. Army
Captain during the Nuremberg Trials. The witness worked with Benush, who was
referred to as the American spy, "either in derision, or in reference
to the article under which he was convicted" (Article 58), when he was
a "trustee" prisoner in the Myaundzha camp in Magadan Oblast near
Susuman in 1955, until his release in 1956. The camp had 3,000 prisoners,
mostly Baltic and Ukrainian nationalists. Benush spent the majority of his
remaining years in Magadan.
LOCATION: unidentified hospital
SUMMARY: A Japanese witness saw and spoke for about 20 minutes with an American
in room No. 2, first medical section, at a hospital in Magadan. A hospital
attendant named Nikolai told him the American was a Captain who had crashed
in the vicinity of Kamchatka. During the conversation, the American stated,
"I cannot accept the sentence of being a spy. The sentence of 15 years
based on Item 6 of Article 58 is unjust," He appeared to be about 28
years old, with blond hair and blue eyes.
LOCATION: Magadan
SUMMARY: A CIA report dated September 2, 1952 reported on the location of
Soviet Transit Camps for Prisoners of War from Korea. Following are excerpts
from the 1952 report:
LOCATION: 5M-Lagpunkt
SUMMARY: A Russian living in Semipalatinsk, Kazakhstan, reported that in November
1952, he saw three American prisoners at the "5M Lagpunkt" detention
facility in Khabarovsk, Russia, where he was incarcerated. He went on a woodcutting
detail with one of them. In December 1952 the Americans were transferred out
of the camp for an unknown destination. A Russian female prisoner serving
a sentence for "Betraying the Motherland" accompanied the Americans.
The camp commander was Lieutenant Kuzenkov.
LOCATION: Khabarovsk Prison
SUMMARY: A Japanese repatriate who was in Khabarovsk Camp No. 21 from 1950-1953,
heard from Soviet guards, prisoners, and laborers in April or May of 1953,
that 12-13 Americans from a military plane shot down by the Soviets were in
Khabarovsk Prison.
LOCATION: Svobodnyi
SUMMARY: In his memoirs (made available to the Russian Side in November 1999)
a source quotes four people who claim to have knowledge of the June 1952 RB-29
crew and their incarceration in Svobodnyi. Excerpts from his memoirs:
A former fishing vessel radio operator related that the Captain of his fishing vessel told him that "not all the crew members of the American [aircraft] had, in fact, died back then (in June) and that ten of those people were now in pre-trial solitary confinement in a prison in the city of Svobodnyi, near Blagoveshchensk."
A former Dalstroi official "was not in the least surprised by [his] question. He replied at once: 'Yes, at first ten people were alive. Yes, first they were brought to Khabarovsk. But, then, of course, they were sent off to Svobodnyi ... They were supposed to have been met by people from the Ministry of Defense...They were not met, though. You see, there was some screw-up in Moscow. Well, I can tell you that they were not met. What happened to them after that, I do not know. And I would advise you not to know as well ... Let the leadership worry itself about it..."
A second former Dalstroi official repeated almost word-for-word the testimony of [the first Dalstroi official] but went on to clarify: "The guys from within 'worked over' the Americans so badly that only eight were taken to Svobodnyi."
A construction official who worked extensively in the Far East and was also an advisor to a minister stated that "he did learn the names of two crewmembers of that aircraft, Bush and Moore, who will forever remain in the soil of the Khabarovsk Region." [Along with 10 other crewmembers, Major Samuel Busch and Master Sergeant David Moore were shot down by Soviet fighters on June 13, 1952. The entire crew remains missing.]
LOCATION: Verkhniy
SUMMARY: According to a Ukrainian citizen who lives in Kiev, seven American
servicemen - three of them pilots whose plane had strayed into Soviet territory
because of mechanical difficulties - were incarcerated in 1952, in a prison
camp called "Verkhniy" in the town of Lultin in Khabarovsky Kray.
The prisoners' primary contact was with a Japanese doctor named Matsuoko.
During their detention, three of them were killed in a mining accident, and
the four others were transferred to another camp.
LOCATION: Khabarovsk
SUMMARY: A CIA report dated September 2, 1952 reported on the location of
Soviet Transit Camps for Prisoners of War from Korea. Following are excerpts
from the 1952 report:
In March this year transports of POWs passed through from Khabarovsk to Chita and from Chita to Molotov roughly every fortnight. They were in small groups of up to 50 persons. According to latest information, dated June 30, 1952, the prisoners, after arriving in Chita, were first sent to the local MVD prisons, and then, after a sufficient number of them had been assembled, were sent further, to Molotov. It is most probable that POWs are undergoing some sort of investigation and selection process while in the MVD prison in Chita. Some of them are retained in prison in Chita for a long time, while others are sent directly by rail to Molotov and other industrial regions in the Ural Mountains.
LOCATION: Air Force Hospital
404
SUMMARY: While training for parachute duties in 1951, a witness broke his
leg and was sent to an Air Force hospital, number 404, in the small town of
Staraya Sysoyovka, Primorskiy Krai, between Arsenyev and Novosysoyevka. Due
to lack of space, he was given a bed on the second floor in the corridor next
to a room with four American patients. One was able to walk, the second was
in traction and the third was burned. He clearly remembered the face of one
of the Americans. He was blond, no younger than 25 years of age. He thought
the blond person was the pilot. The witness was able to talk to and see the
patients, as well as listen to their dialogue during questioning. He stated
that the first patient was between 22 and 27 years of age, had light colored
hair, was thin, had blue eyes, and bent over with a visible limp. His height
was about six feet tall. Patient one said he was from Cleveland and had two
children. The witness said the second and third patients appeared older. He
had no other description, other than to say that they were from San Francisco,
Chicago, and Los Angeles. He could not say which patient was from which city.
LOCATION: Vanino Bay
SUMMARY: In 1947, a Ukrainian witness from Gribenko was moved from Lvov to
the Vanino Bay Transit Prison in the Soviet Far East where he remained for
about two years, 1948-49. He claimed that there were numerous American prisoners
there, awaiting movement to other prisons. He believed the Americans were
from WWII. The witness described the layout of the Vanino Bay Transit Prison
as consisting of 15 separate zones, each holding 5,000-7,000 prisoners, and
that the Americans were housed in zone No. 2. He said all prisoners were moved
to Kolyma by the ships: "Felix Dzerzhinski," "Nagin,"
"Dyurma," and "Dalstroi." He said that whenever
these ships passed by Hokkaido, the crew put on civilian attire so the Japanese
would not know they were prison ships.
LOCATION: Artem
SUMMARY: A Russian stated that an acquaintance of his who lived in Artem,
a northern suburb of Vladivostok, said that as a little boy in the early 1950Õs,
he saw a column of about 100 American POWs marching near the town. When asked
how he knew they were Americans, he stated that it was "well-known"
(in the village.)
LOCATION: Vladivostok
SUMMARY: A CIA report dated September 2, 1952 reported on the location of
Soviet transit camps for Prisoners of War from Korea. Following are excerpts
from the 1952 report:
![]() Memorial to Victims of Political Oppression. Perm, Russia. |
Courtesy DPMO Website - http://www.dtic.mil/dpmo/
Department
of Defense,
Defense Prisoner Of War/Missing Personnel Office
2400 Defense Pentagon, Washington, DC 20301-2400
DISCLAIMER: The content of
this message is the sole responsibility of the originator. Posting of this
message to the AII POW-MIA Archives© list does not show AII POW-MIA endorsement.
It is provided so you may make an informed decision. AIIPOWMIAI is not associated
in any capacity with any United States Government agency or entity, nor with
any non-governmental organization.
COPYRIGHT NOTICE: In accordance with Title 17 U. S. C. Section 107, any copyrighted
work in this message is distributed under fair use without profit or payment
to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information
for nonprofit research and educational purposes only. [Ref. http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml
]
AII POW-MIA does not endorse any offsite material, organization or individual.
For information purposes only.