While monitoring
North Korea in January 1968,
Pueblo came under attack by North Korean naval forces, two Soviet-era submarine chasers, four motor torpedo boats, and two MiG-21 aircraft. U.S. Naval officials and the crew have claimed the ship was in international waters all the time. North Koreans attacked and ultimately boarded the ship, killing one man and taking the ship and her remaining crew of 82 to the port at
Wonsan. For the next 11 months, Bucher and his crew were held as
POWs by the North Koreans. The crew reported upon release that they were starved and regularly tortured while in North Korean custody. This treatment allegedly turned worse when the North Koreans realized that crewmen were secretly giving them "
the finger" in staged propaganda photos, an action the crew had initially explained away as being a "Hawaiian good luck sign". Bucher was psychologically tortured such as being
put through a mock firing squad in an effort to make him confess. Eventually, the Koreans threatened to execute his men in front of him, and Bucher relented and agreed to 'confess to his and the crew's transgression.' Bucher wrote the confession since a 'confession' by definition needed to be written by the confessor himself. They verified the meaning of what he wrote, but failed to catch the pun when he said "We paean the North Korean state. We paean their great leader Kim Il Sung" ("
Paean" sounds almost identical to "
pee on"). Following an apology, a written admission by the United States that
Pueblo had been spying, and an assurance that the United States would not spy in the future, the North Korean government decided to release the 82 remaining crew members. On 23 December 1968, the crew was taken by buses to the demilitarized zone (DMZ) border with South Korea and ordered to walk south across the "
Bridge of No Return". Exactly 11 months after being taken prisoner, Bucher led the long line of crewmen, followed at the end by the executive officer, Lieutenant
Ed Murphy, the last man across the bridge. The U.S. then verbally retracted the ransom admission, apology, and assurance. Meanwhile, the North Koreans blanked out the paragraph above the signature, which read: "and this hereby receipts for 82 crewmen and one dead body" (Fireman Duane Hodges was killed by North Korean gunfire during the taking of
Pueblo). Upon release, several members of the crew were crippled and nearly blind as a result of the brutality and malnourishment. No American military operations have been attempted to retrieve USS
Pueblo. The ship is still officially carried as in
commission in the
United States Navy's
Naval Vessel Register. It remains in North Korea as a tourist attraction.
Navy court of inquiry Following his release, Bucher was subjected to a court of inquiry by the Navy. A
court martial was recommended. However, the Secretary of the Navy,
John H. Chafee, intervened on Bucher's behalf and no action was taken against him. Bucher followed his orders to not start any international incidents, and he felt that while a ship could be replaced, lives could not. Bucher was not found guilty of any indiscretions and continued his Navy career until retirement in the rank of commander. The U.S. government finally recognized the crew's sacrifice and granted prisoner-of-war medals to the crew in 1989. ==Death and burial==