So, There I was……*
Flying the F-15 at Kadena and a pinned on Major and Flight Commander. I’ve spent the last 3 weeks deployed to Kwang
Ju AB ROK to provide Air Defense for the Seoul Olympics. I was in charge of 6 pilots, a flight surgeon
and a maintenance detachment. Our mission was to ensure if the Kim family
wanted to provide an airshow on international television, that there would be
an F-15 in close formation and another one in trail with locked on
missiles. A future post will provide more details about
that deployment.
This post will be about a comment I’d made on one of Sarge’s posts which went “the only thing more dangerous than a 19 year old with a gun
is a 19 year old with a gun, a badge and a beanie.” There was good discussion on that post about
peace officers vs police and good police officers vs “badge heavy” members of
the police. As Sarge says, go read it, I’ll
wait. This post describes the incident where I came to realize the truth in my "gun, badge, beanie" statement.
It’s Sunday morning, 4 of the 5 Eagles had redeployed the
day before, but one had a problem on start and had taken the rest of the day to
fix. We had gotten it fixed, but it was
too late to deploy so we spent an additional day. I stayed behind and will be flying the jet
back. It’s a beautiful day and I’m
making good time. Got the radar run out
to max range, and as far as I can tell, I’m the only person airborne in the
whole world at this time. Ahhhh! I’ve been handed off to Fukuoka control and
diplomatically made contact. After a
Time, I’ve been handed off to Kadena’s Approach Control. I can see the island and the runway from a
long way away, so am intending to do an overhead pattern and land. I’m about 15 minutes out, so contact the
tower and let them know I’m coming in and would they contact maintenance and
customs to let them know, please?
![]() |
| A 67FS Eagle at Red Flag AK (Aim-9 on Left Outboard, AMRAAM on left inboard and an ACMI pod on right outboard) Source: en.wikipedia.org |
Pitch out and land, through dearm and back in to the
shelter. Crew chief marshalls me in, and
gives me the shutdown signal. I cut the
throttle and when the last engine winds down, turn everything off and climb
down the ladder handing my A-3 bag down to the crew chief. We discuss what had happened to the jet and
what it’s status was for the flight down, and he starts to do whatever it is
that crew chiefs do to get the airplane ready for what’s next. I glance at my watch, it’s been about 10
minutes since shutdown. No Customs. Not unusual, though, they sometimes get busy
with inbound MAC flights. I hadn’t seen
anything on Radar, or heard any radio, but…
The crew chief finishes putting the jet to bed, and the line
chief comes by in the bread van to pick him up.
Offers me a lift, but I tell him I can’t, customs hasn’t come by. Would he mind giving them a call when he gets
in to the maintenance shack, please? No
problem. Now been 30 minutes since shut
down.
I sit down on my A-3 bag and cool my heels for a bit, when I
see a car drive up in the squadron parking lot and my wife and 4 year old son
get out. They walk up to the red line
and ask what’s happening. I respond with
BTHOM, I’m waiting on customs. It was
not unheard of that customs would not show up.
It had happened a time or two. I
decide I’ll give them another 15 minutes to make it an even hour.
![]() |
| Where it all went down, at the cross intersection in front of the shelter. Source: Google Maps |
I ask her how everything’s going, she says little Juvat is
running a fever, ear infection or something.
As the clock is ticking, one of Kadena’s famous torrential downbursts is
headed our way, I tell the wife to get back in the car and then sprint back and
climb under the jet. It provides some
protection, but I get wet.
Well, it’s now an hour.
I grab my bag and walk off to the Squadron. As I exit the flight line, a little blue
truck comes speeding up and slams to a stop right in front of me and out jumps
this spiffy A1C. All shiny boots and
beret creased to adhere to the side of his head. He asks me where I think I’m going and why
did I leave the secure area before being cleared by customs AKA himself? How was he supposed to make sure I hadn’t
brought back drugs or any other contraband?
He was afraid he was going to have to detain me. (In Well Seasoned Fool’s
vernacular, he’s “badge heavy”.)
I think I smiled before responding.
I stated that if he detained me, that would raise questions
about where customs had been for the last hour and ten minutes. Since he had
stated that making sure Pilots didn’t bring back drugs or other contraband was their
mission, didn’t that absence represent dereliction of duty on his part. Clearly
had I wanted to smuggle drugs, his not being present to intercept them meant he
had failed in his duty. I then
responded, if he wanted, he could inspect my A-3 bag, otherwise, I was
proceeding to the squadron.
Walk in to the Squadron, hang up my flight gear and notice
the Boss is in. Knock on his door and
ask if I can have a moment of his time.
I explain what had happened. He
tells me to go home and not worry about it.
Well…
I get home, and as we walk in, the phone is ringing. It’s Sgt Schmuckatelli, the NCOIC of the
customs detachment. He requests that I
report to the detachment for customs evasion. I call the Boss who’s now at
home. He tells me to come over while he
makes some calls. We share a back yard,
it’s not far.
His wife lets me in as he’s
on the phone. His side of the
conversation goes like this “Bob, how long should my guys have to wait before
customs shows up at the jet…..Yeah, I know they shouldn’t, but suppose a MAC
flight had just landed?....10 minutes… would 15 minutes be out of line?.....How
about 30 minutes?...It would?….How about 45?.....One of my guys just waited
over an hour……”
The conversation devolved from there….
He hangs up and says “Listen Up…Report to the Customs
Det. Do NOT sign any papers. Do not give them your ID or anything of
yours. Do not make any statements. Do not answer any questions. Do you have any questions about the
directives I've given you?”
No sir!
I show up at the detachment, and the NCOIC says “Give me ‘your ID!” I look at him
quizzically. He says “What?” I respond, “Last I checked, I’m an officer
and you’re not. I haven’t been charged
with anything, so protocol would say you should amend that last statement to be
“May I have your ID, please sir?”
Well, if you’re going down, go down fighting.
He says, “May I have your ID, please…sir?”
I respond “Unfortunately, Sergeant, my Commander has
expressly ordered me not to give you my ID or any other items.”
“Well, we’ll need you to sign this statement.”
“Unfortunately, Sergeant, my Commander has expressly ordered
me not to sign any papers whatsoever.”
“We need to ask you some questions!”
“Unfortunately, Sergeant, my Commander has expressly ordered
me not to answer any questions.”
“Would you please wait here while I get this straightened
out, then?”
“Of Course”
I’m sitting there cooling my heels when I notice a gym bag
by the desk with my favorite A1C’s name on it.
It’s open with some Gym clothes spread out, drying off. Hmmm.
I also notice the Sunday Stars and Stripes beside it. I grab it and start reading the comics.
Finish them and begin the NY Times crossword
puzzle. In ink. In walks the Airman. He says, “What are you doing?” “The crossword puzzle, how was your run this
morning?” His eyes flash to the bag and
gym clothes. Mumbles something under his
breath and walks out.
Shortly
thereafter, the NCOIC comes in and says I can go, but “don’t do this again.” I briefly consider asking what “this” was,
but decide discretion is the better part of valor and wish them a good day.
It got very stupid
from there. A few weeks later, we deploy to the PI. On RTB, I fly via
MAC and go through customs
at the terminal. They squeezed the toothpaste
out of the tube. The next deployment, I
fly back, they open up all the panels on my jet. The following
deployment, having had about
all the fun I can stand and since I’m MAC’ing back, I pack all my
laundry in to
a box and mail it back to Kadena. At the
time, overseas APO to APO mail didn’t cost anything. In fact, I
recognized the box on a pallet in the back of the same 141 I was riding
home. I get off the
jet at the terminal, and walk right up to the processing line. An
Airman says, “Sir, you can’t go through
yet, the bags haven’t been unloaded.” I
respond, “I don’t have any bags.” “How
long were you gone?” “2 weeks” “Where’s your laundry?” “In the mail”
“How are we supposed to inspect that?”
“Not my problem!” and walked out
the door.
I’m not the only guy getting the treatment, and the
rumblings are starting to get loud.
Again, we deploy
to Cope Thunder.
Towards the end of the deployment, there’s a bit of a security
hubbub. Seems one of the classified
avionics boxes is missing from the nose of one of the jets. Nobody can
seem to find it. We redeploy the next day and my wingman is
the one star Air Division commander. No
big deal, within the structure of a Major to Brigadier General
relationship, he’s
a pretty nice guy. A good stick, he just
wants to fly wing today.
![]() |
| This is obviously not 24 Eagles, nor would they use this formation on Initial, Just thought it was a cool picture. Source:Commons.Wikipedia.org |
We bring the
entire squadron down initial, pitch out and land. Dearm and instead of heading to the shelters,
we’re directed to park in front of the tower.
Hmmm.
Lot’s of vehicles in the
area. We get the jets all shut down, unload
our bags and are looking for the bread vans to take us to the squadron. Instead we get told to form up with our bags,
we’re going to get searched for the missing equipment. I’m standing next to the General, and look
over at him, he gives me the stay quiet sign.
I nod.
The Airman works his way
down the line. Opens my bag, he doesn't see
the 4’ X 2’ X 1’ 125 lb box in amongst my dirty laundry and proceeds to start
patting me down. Strangely enough, he doesn't find it on my person either.
The General
is standing right next to me, his bag on the other side, so the Airman begins
patting down him down. As he progresses
up his leg, side, under side of his arm, top side of his arm to his shoulder
where he notices a star and goes white as a sheet. “Sir, you don’t have to be here.”
“On the contrary, Son, there is nowhere on earth more
important for me to be than right here, right now.”
“Would you do me the courtesy of passing a message to your
Commander, your OIC, NCOIC, and the OSI Detachment Chief, inviting them to my
office tomorrow morning at 0700, please?”
We never had a problem with Customs after that.
* War Stories begin this way, and while these events all happened, minor details may have been lost to memory. Not the final memory with the General, though. THAT one is firmly entered in my memory of favorite events (and favorite Generals).





"You WILL respect my authoritah!" said by too many wearing a badge..........(heh heh heh) ah juvat, a much needed chuckle on this Friday morning.
ReplyDeleteExactly! A nineteen year old with a gun and a badge! Rules the world…in his mind.
DeleteThings got better when the General splained things to the officers along with the consequences ( to them) if it happrned again. It didn’t.
juvat
"We redeploy the next day and my wingman is the one star Air Division commander. No big deal, within the structure of a Major to Brigadier General relationship, he’s a pretty nice guy. A good stick, he just wants to fly wing today. "
ReplyDeleteand
"“On the contrary, Son, there is nowhere on earth more important for me to be than right here, right now.”"
Makes me wonder, had he been hearing about the paybacks from Customs and set them up for that? Great story. Thanks.
I’m pretty sure he knew about the situation and took action. Great guy and a talented leader and fighter pilot.
Deletejuvat
Great fafo story. Question on the pic. Is that a couple of aardvarks there ??
ReplyDeleteThey're all Eagles except in the first picture. The Lead Aircraft and the one to Lead's right are Australian Mirages. IIRC, they and we had deployed to the Phillipines for a Cope Thunder Exercise. CT was an Air to Air war game, very intense fighting and you had to keep your head on a swivel. That having been said, it was good training.
Deletejuvat
The non-American aircraft are MiG-27 Floggers from the Indian Air Force.
DeleteThere are far too many people that, given a sliver of authority or power, become miniature tyrants. Part of it is likely the feeling of power, but I suspect part of it is envy of others.
ReplyDeleteAnd yes, always interesting how they fold so quickly under authority. Someone that had a real issue and that could make a real case would, I suspect, have no problem defending their actions.
THBB,
DeleteZackly!!!! And that last sentence applied specifically to the people in charge of the SP's. Their failure to lead spread like wildfire throughout the organizations they were responsible for. Thankfully, the Air Division Commander had no such shortfall and handled the situation quite well. The officers and NCO's he had in his office were relieved of duty and off the base within a couple of weeks. The SP's attitude changed very quickly although I never saw my single striper SP again either.
juvat
In the mid 90's I had the occasion to travel to London (Gatwick) in support of a joint SOCOM/UK program. Three consecutive trips I was detained in customs by the same female customs officer. Questions, ruffled baggage, etc. The 3rd time I noted this was the 3rd time and was wondring why. She didn't respond directly but reading between the lines you might recall in this timeframe there were certain "troubles" ongoing inside the United Kingdom and Northern Ireland and it appears that I fitted a profile. In subsequent trips it appeared I no longer fit that profile ...
ReplyDeleteAs an aside, around 2016 I used my Global Entry status and gained access to the equivilant UK programme, which enabled much quicker entry as I was traveling there once a month.
WTL,
DeleteGlad things worked out for you when you inquired about the inspections. Didn't work for us until the Big Guy got involved. But, his involvement was VERY successful. Thank Goodness.
My wife, being a travel agent, is sponsoring a couple of River Cruises in Europe this Fall and next Spring. Might have to look into Global Entry option. Thanks for the info!
juvat
I love a good sea story, especially with a happy ending!
ReplyDeleteJB
The F.E. Warren Minuteman Missile defenders are diligent, as they should be, but there is always that one 1st Lt. A few years ago a lady I spent time with had a passion for rock hounding and would take me along as a pack mule. We were exploring near a silo, perhaps 1/2 mile, when a Huey landed nearby and a 1st Lt and four Defenders came over to us. Said officer was quite full of himself and the Defenders had their war faces on. Unfortunately for the young officer, the lady I was with was a Weld County Correction Officer and a Deputy (sworn peace officer). Upon his demand for identification, she produced her credentials and firmly corrected him as to his authority. My helpful remark was telling him his rank insignia was upside down. They shortly departed on their Huey (since upgraded to Blackhawks).
ReplyDeleteYes....well.... people placed in position of authority without proper training in how and when to use it frequently screw it up. Sounds like a good example .
Deletejuvat