Ron Ridenhour

Ridenhour was a GI and investigative journalist who played a central role in spurring the investigation of the My Lai massacre. He heard of the massacre from friends while serving in Vietnam and took it upon himself to conduct a number of interviews.

On his return to the United States Ridenhour sent letters to numerous congressmen and government officials, spurring a probe that led to several indictments against and convictions of those involved, most notably William Calley. He died in 1998. 

 

Mr. Ron Ridenhour
1416 East Thomas Road #104
Phoenix, Arizona

March 29, 1969
Gentlemen:

It was late in April,1968 that I first heard of “Pinkville” and what allegedly happened there.  I received that first report with some skepticism,but in the following months I was to hear similar stories from such a wide variety of people that it became impossible for me to disbelieve that something rather dark and bloody did indeed occur sometime in March,1968 in a village called “Pinkville” in the Republic of Viet Nam.

The circumstances that led to my having access to the reports I’m about to relate need explanation. I was inducted in March,1967 into the U. S. Army. After receiving various training I was assigned to the 70th Infantry Detachment (LRP), 11th Light Infantry Brigade at Schofield Barracks,Hawaii,in early October, 1967. That unit, the 70th Infantry Detachennt (LRP), was disbanded a week before the llth Brigade shipped out for Viet Nam on the 5th of December, 1967. All of the man from whom I later heard reports of the “Pinkville” incident were reassigned to “C” Company, lst Battalion, 20th Infantry, llth Light Infantry Brigade.  I was reassigned to the aviation section of Headquarters Headquarters Company llth LIB. After we had been in Viet Nam for 3 to 4 months many of the men from the 70th Inf. Det. (LRP) began to transfer into the same unit, “E” Company,51st Infantry (LRP).

In late April, 1968 I was awaiting orders for a transfer from HHC, llth Brigade to Company “E,” 51st Inf, (LRP),when I happened to run into Pfc “Butch” Gruver, whom I had known in Hawaii.  Gruver told me he had been assigned to “C” Company lst of the 20th until April lst when he transferred to the unit that I was headed for. During the course of our conversation he told me the first of many reports I was to hear of “Pinkville.”

“Charlie” Company 1/20 had been assigned to Task Force Barker in late February,1968 to help conduct “search and destroy” operations on the Batangan Peninsula,Barker’s area of operation. The  task force was operating out of L. F. Dottie, located five or six miles north of Quang Nhai city on Viet Namese National Highway 1. Gruver said that Charlie Company had sustained casualties; primarily from mines and booby traps, almost everyday from the first day they arrived on the peninsula.  One village area was particulary troublesome and seemed to be infested with booby traps and enemy soldiers. It was located about six miles northeast of Quang Nh,ai city at approximate coordinates B.S. 728795. It was a notorious area and the men of Task Force Barker had a special name for it: they called it “Pinkville.” One morning in the latter part of March,Task Force Barker moved out from its firebase headed for “Pinkville.” Its mission: destroy the trouble spot and all of its inhabitants.

When “Butch” told me this I didn’t quite believe that what he was telling me was true, but he assured me that it was and went on to describe what had happened. The other two companies that made up the task force cordoned off the village so that “Charlie” Company could move through to destroy the structures and kill the inhabitants. Any villagers who ran from Charlie Company were stopped by the encircling companies. I asked “Butch” several times if all the people were killed. He said that he thought they were men, women and children. He recalled seeing a small boy, about three or four years old, standing by the trail with a gunshot wound in one arm. The boy was clutching his wounded arm with his other hand, while blood trickled between his fingers. He was staring around himself in shock and disbelief at what he saw. “He just stood there with big eyes staring around like he didn’t understand; he didn’t believe wh.at was happening. Then the captain’s RTO (radio operator) put a burst of 16 (M-16 rifle) fire into him.” It was so bad, Gruver said, that one of the men in his squad shot himself in the foot in order to be medivaced out of the area so that he would not have to participate in the slaughter.  Although he had not seen it, Gruver had been told by people he considered trustworthy that one of the company’s officers, 2nd Lieutenant Kally (this spelling may be incorrect) had rounded up several groups of villagers (each group consisting of a minimum of 20 persons of both sexes and all ages). According to the story, Kally then machine-gunned each group. Gruver estimated that the population of the village had been 300 to 400 people and that very few, if any, escaped.

After hearing this account I couldn’t quite accept it. Somehow I just couldn’t believe that not only had so many young American men participated in such an act of barbarism,but that their officers had ordered it. There were other men in the unit I was soon to be assigned to,”E” Company, 51st Infantry (LRP), who had been in Charlie Company at the time that Gruver alleged the incident at “Pinkville” had occurred. I became determined to ask them about “Pinkville” so that I might compare, their accounts with Pfc Gruver’s.

When I arrived at “Echo” Company, 51st Infantry (LRP) the first men I looked for were Pfcs Michael Terry, and William Doherty.  Both were veterans of “Charlie” Company, 1/20 and “Pinkville.” Instead of contradicting “Butch” Gruver’s story they corroborated it, adding some tasty tidbits of information of their own. Terry and-Doherty had been in the same, squad and their platoon was the third platoon of “C” Company to pass through. the village. Most of the people they Came to were already dead. Those that weren’t were sought out and shot. The platoon left nothing alive neither livestock nor people. Around noon the two soldiers’ squad stopped to eat. “Billy and I started to get out our chow” Terry said, “but close to us was a bunch of Vietnamese in a heap, and some of them were moaning. Cally (2nd Lt. Cally) had been through before us and all of them had been shot, but many weren’t dead. It was obvious that they weren’t going to get any medical attention so Billy and I got up and went over to where they were. I guess we sort of finished them off.” Terry went on to say that he and Doherty then returned to where their packs were and ate lunch. He estimated the size oif the village to be 200 to 300 people. Doherty thought that the population of “Pinkville had been 400 people.

If Terry, Doherty and Gruver could be believed, then not only had “Charlie” Company received orders to slaughter all the inhabitants of the village, but those orders had come from the commanding officer of Task Force Barker, or possibly even higher in the chain of command.  Pfc Terry stated that when Captain Medina (Charlie Company’s commanding officer Captain Ernest Medina) issued the order for the destruction of “Pinkville” he had been hesitant, as if it were something he didn’t want to do but had to.  Others I spoke to concurred with Terry on this.

It was June before I spoke to anyone who had something of significance to add to what I had alreadybeen told of the “Pinkville” incident. It was the end of June, 1968 when I ran into Sargent Larry La Croix at the USO in Chu Lai. La Croix had been in 2nd Lt. Cally’s platoon on the day Task Force Barker swept through “Pinkville.” What he told me verified the stories of the others, but he also had something new to add.  He had been a witness to Kally’s gunning down at least three separate groups of villagers. “It was terrible. They were slaughtering villagers like so many sheep.” Cally’s men were dragging people out of bunkers and hootches and putting them together in a group. The people in the group were men, women and children of all ages.  As soon as he felt that the group was big enough, Cally ordered a M-60 (machine gun) set up and the people killed. La Croix said that he bore witness to this procedure at least three times.    The three groups were of different sizes, one of about twenty people, one of about thirty people and one of about 40 people.  When the first group was put together Kally ordered Pfc. Torres to man the machine-gun and open fire on the villagers that had been grouped together. This Torres did, but before everyone in the group was sown he ceased fire and refused to fire again.  After ordering Torres to recommence firing several times, Lieutenant Kally took over the M-60 and finished shooting the remaining villagers in that first group himself.  Sargent La Croix told me that Kally didn’t bother to order anyone to take the machine-gun when the other two groups of villagers were formed.  He simply manned it himself and shot down all villagers in both groups.

This account of Sargent La Croix’s confirmed the rumors that Gruver, Terry and Doherty had previously told me about Lieutenant Kally.  It also convinced me that there was a very substantial amount of truth to the stories that all of these men had told. If I needed more convincing, I was about to receive it.

It was in the middle of November,1968 just a few weeks before I was to return to the United States for separation from the army that I talked to Pfc Michael Bernhardt.  Bernhardt had served his entire year in Viet Nam in “Charlie” Company 1/20 and he too was about to go home.  “Bernie” substantiated the tales told by the other men I had talked to in vivid, bloody detail and added this.  “Bernie” had absolutely refused to take part in the massacre of the villagers of “Pinkville” that morning and he thought that it was rather strange that the officers of the company had not made an issue of it. But that evening “Medina (Captain Ernest Medina) came up to me (“Bernie”) and told me not to do anything stupid like write my congressman” about what had happened that day.  Bernhardt assured Captain Medina that he had no such thing in mind.  He had nine months left in Viet Nam and felt that it was dangerous enough just fighting the acknowledged enemy.

Exactly what did, in fact, occur in the village of “Pinkville” in March,1968 I do not know for certain, but I am convinced that it was something very black indeed. I remain irrevocably persuaded that if you and I do truly believe in the principles, of justice and the equality of every man, however humble, before the law, that form the very backbone that this country is founded on, then we must press forward a widespread and public investigation of this matter with all our combined efforts.  I think that it was Winston Churchill who, once said “A country without a conscience is a country without a soul, and a country without a soul is a country that cannot survive.” I feel that I must take some positive action on this matter.  I hope that you will launch an investigation immediately and keep me informed of your progress.  If you cannot, then I don’t know what other course of action to take.

I have considered sending this to newspapers, magazines and broadcasting companies, but I somehow feel that investigation and action by the Congress of the United States is the appropriate procedure, and as a conscientious citizen I have no desire to further besmirch the image of the American serviceman in the eyes of the world. I feel that this action, while probably it would promote attention, would not bring about the constructive actions that the direct actions of the Congress of the United States would.

Sincerely,

 

/s/ Ron Ridenhour