I was looking up B-17 dataplates, and found one, and found some history on it. The wreck is still in the Pacific. It would seem as though the dataplate had been removed from the wreck. I asked about it and was told it should have still been on the wreck. But the photo of the dataplate shows it has been removed and laying on someones dresser. Anyway, the story of this B-17 crew incensed me!

Read on:
Pilot 1/Lt. Ernest A. Naumann, O-427762 (POW, executed November 25, 1943) Baldwin, NY
Co-Pilot 1/Lt Winslow G. Gardner, O-728853 (MIA / KIA) Menan, ID
Bombardier 2/Lt Oliver R. Alvin, O-669943 (MIA / KIA) North Branch, MN
Navigator 2/Lt. Charles H. Lewis, O-791838 (MIA / KIA) Brooklyn, NY
Engineer TSgt Thomas H Fox, 6977438 (POW, executed June 1943, BNR) Mechanicsville, NY
Radio SSgt Paul J. Cascio, Jr., 13072715 (POW, survived) Baltimore, MD
Ball Turret S/Sgt Virgil E. DeVoss, 6917104 (MIA / KIA) Danville, OH
Gunner Sgt Bruno R. Bukalski, 15082036 (MIA / KIA) Kouts, IN
Radio Sgt Albert Smith, 13028645 (MIA / KIA) Philadelphia, PA
Tail Gunner Pfc Charles H. Green, Jr., 12011992 (POW, executed June 1943, BNR) Morgantown, WV
Crashed June 1, 1943
MACR none
Aircraft History
Built by Boeing at Seattle. Delivered to the U. S. Army. Ferried overseas via Hawaii to Australia.
Wartime History
Assigned to the 5th Air Force, 43rd Bombardment Group, 64th Bombardment Squadron. Nicknamed "Texas #6".
Mission History
On June 1, 1943 took off from 7-Mile Drome near Port Moresby at 10:10 on an armed reconnaissance mission over the northern and southern coast of New Britain Island.
At 1410, six hours into the flight, this B-17 was attacked by a a dozen Japanese fighters. Their last radio message received was from over the Wide Bay area. Attacking Zeros hit the bomber's fuel tank near the No. 2 engine, causing a fire and explosion, causing at least four of the crew to be blown out of the bomber.
This B-17 crashed into the summit of Hong Kong Mountain, on the eastern aspect of Waterfall Bay, up the coast from Pomio. Five of the crew went down with aircraft.
Fates of the Crew
Four of the crew: Naumann, Cascio, Lewis, Alvin and possibly Gardner were blown from the B-17 by the fuel tank explosion. Naumann and Cascio were wearing parachutes and were able to deploy them successfully and landed safely. Miraculously, Fox and Green did not yet miraculously landed unhurt. Fox was badly burned. Green had two minor wounds in his left knee which became gangrenous over the next week.
The four surviving crew: Naumann, Cascio, Green and Fox found each other and located the B-17 crash site. Among the wreckage, they located and identified the bodies of five of the crew: Lewis, Alvin, DeVoss, Bukalski and Smith. No trace of Gardner was ever found, it was presumed he was also blown clear but did not survive.
On June 8, 1943 the four survivors were captured by a Japanese Army patrol near a village and became Prisoners Of War (POW).
Postwar, the Japanese claimed that Green and Fox were taken to a hospital at Gasmata. Neither of were seen again and it is presumed they died or were executed. In 1946, a RAAF Searcher Team led by S/L Keith Rundle concluded both were taken to Mal Mal and executed by the Japanese during the middle of June 1943.
Naumann and Cascio were transported to Rabaul and interned at the Navy POW camp. Both were tortured for information and denied food or medical care.
Around November 12, 1943 Cascio was transported to Japan with a group of prisoners. He was the only member of the crew to survive the war.
On November 25, 1943 Naumann and eleven other Allied prisoners were taken from the POW camp. Civilians who were interned at the same camp included Reverand Joseph Lamarre. They were told by the guards that the twelve prisoners were being taken to Japan. Two weeks later a group of Indian POWs informed Rev. Lamarre that the twelve had been beheaded on the outskirts of Rabaul. Nauman and five other 43rd Bomb Group B-17 crew members were executed includng Neuman, Burnside, Mulligan and George from B-17E 41-9011 and Curry from B-17E "Honi Kuu Okole" 41-9244.
S/Sgt Paul J. Cascio, Jr. would later report:
"We were attacked by twelve Japanese fighter planes. They hit our gas tank, which caused out plane to catch on fire. The fire could not be controlled. Lieutenant Naumann, our pilot, ordered us to abandon the plane, but before we could do so the plane blew up approximately a minute an a half after it was hit. I was thrown out by the explosion. ...There were only two members of the crew who came down in parachutes. Lieutenant Naumann was one and I was the other. We landed in the jungle and were with the natives for six days. On the seventh day, while pretending to take us to New Guinea in a small boat, they led us to a coastal village where the Japanese were waiting for us."
Wreckage
This B-17 crashed at the summit of Hong Kong mountain, roughly two and half hours walk form Rem village at aprrpoximately Lat 5.26 Long 151.47. After the crash, the four surviving crew located the crash site and among the wreckage located and identified the bodies of five of the crew: Lewis, Alvin, DeVoss, Bukalski and Smith.
On March 12, 1946, a RAAF Searcher Team led by S/L Keith Rundle visted the crash site and recovered the remains of at least three crew members along with a ring with the first two of three initials being "A. H.".