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Pacheco Alberto D.

Name:
Alberto D. Pacheco
Rank:
Private First Class
Serial Number:
20842523
Unit:
200th Coast Artillery Regiment
Date of Death:
0000-00-00
State:
New Mexico
Cemetery:
Desert View Memorial Park, California
Plot:
Row:
Grave:
Decoration:
Comments:

Alberto D. Pacheco was born in 1919. He served in HQ Battery, 200th Coast Artillery Regiment (AntiAircraft) as a Private First Class during World War II. An American prisoner of war, he was one of the Japanese massacre victims in Puerto Princesa, Palawan Philippines. In order to prevent the rescue of prisoners of war by the advancing Allies, on 14 December 1944, units of the Japanese Fourteenth Area Army (under the command of General Tomoyuki Yamashita) brought the POWs back to their own camp. An air raid warning was sounded to get the prisoners into the shelter trenches, the 150 prisoners of war at Puerto Princesa entered those trenches, and the Japanese soldiers set them on fire using barrels of gasoline. Prisoners who tried to escape the flames were shot down by machine gun fire. Others attempted to escape by climbing over a cliff that ran along one side of the trenches, but were later hunted down and killed. Only 11 men escaped the slaughter; 139 were killed. Those that did escape to southern Palawan, and eventual rescue, were aided by Filipino scouts and guerrillas under the command of Nazario Mayor. PFC Pacheco was one of the 11 prisoners who escaped from the massacre.

After the war, he and his wife settled in Monterey Park and raised five children. He died in 1997 and is now buried in the Desert View Memorial Park, Victorville, San Bernardino County, California, USA.

Source of information: www.findagrave.com, www.wikipedia.com