Upon leaving Congress, LeBoutillier continued to be active on the
Vietnam War POW/MIA issue. He founded the Sky Hook II Project, dedicated to recovering living American POWs in
Southeast Asia. He has made trips to
Laos and
Vietnam and also met with Lao and Vietnamese leaders in
Hanoi,
Ho Chi Minh City,
Jakarta, New York City,
Vientiane, and Paris. LeBoutillier was a frequent guest on radio and television and had hosted
radio talk show programs on
WMCA radio and
WABC radio. He conducted an exclusive television
interview with
Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn for
NBC's
Tomorrow Show in 1981, and interviewed
Richard Nixon for
ABC Radio in 1984. The interview was Nixon's first live network radio appearance since
leaving the White House. He has been a frequent guest commentator on
The Today Show,
20/20,
Nightline,
Crossfire, and
Imus in the Morning. He joined with noted Canadian broadcaster
Arlene Bynon in December 2010, to launch
Bynon/LeBoutillier, a
talk radio show simultaneously airing on
WABC in New York City and
AM640 in
Toronto while also airing in the
United Kingdom. In January 2021, LeBoutillier signed a letter calling on Republicans to impeach President
Donald Trump after the
2021 storming of the United States Capitol.
Books LeBoutillier has written books, most notably the 1978 best-seller
Harvard Hates America. In 1989 he wrote
Vietnam Now; The Case for Normalization and in 1979 co-authored a novel,
Primary. He is the co-author, with
Edward Klein, of
The Obama Identity. He has been a contributor to
The New York Times, the
New York Post and
The Wall Street Journal, among others. ==Personal life==