On April 6, 1970, Stone and his colleague
Sean Flynn were captured by the
People's Army of Vietnam in the
Kampong Cham province after leaving Phnom Penh on rented
Honda motorbikes looking to find the front lines of fighting in Cambodia. Investigations by fellow photojournalist Tim Page, reported in the UK
Sunday Times on March 24, 1991, indicate that Stone and Flynn were taken first to the village of Sangke Kaong, and then to other villages before being handed to the
Khmer Rouge. Page tracked down an almost-empty grave in a village known as Bei Met in which two foreigners allegedly had been buried. Forensic examination of the few remains left in the grave suggested they belonged to a tall man and a short man – consistent with the appearance of Flynn and Stone respectively – and that both had died violently. However, in 2003, the Pentagon's Central Identification Lab in Hawaii confirmed by DNA testing that the remains found by Tim Page were actually those of Clyde McKay, a Merchant Marine mutineer (part of the
SS Columbia Eagle incident) and Larry Humphrey, an army deserter. Further data supports that Flynn and Stone had never been in that area. Stone and Flynn's disappearance is chronicled in
Perry Deane Young's 1975 memoir
Two of the Missing. A 1991 film,
Danger on the Edge of Town, recounted
Tim Page's "search to discover the fate of his friends Sean Flynn and Dana Stone". Stone's younger brother, John Thomas Stone, joined the
U.S. Army in 1971, soon after graduating from high school, reportedly due in part to a desire to discover what had happened to his brother. He later served as a medic in the
Vermont National Guard and was killed by
friendly fire on March 29, 2006, when the 52-year-old sergeant was on his third tour in the
war in Afghanistan. == See also ==