Early life Echanis was born in
Nampa, Idaho. He enlisted in the US Army in 1969 upon graduation from
Ontario High School. Echanis had long been interested in the military and came from a family where his father, Frank, and his uncles had all served during World War II. In published articles, Echanis indicated that many of his skills at stealth and concealment were inspired by his reading about American Indians and trying out these techniques when hiding from local police.
Military service Echanis attended basic training at
Fort Ord, California, and went on to
airborne training at
Fort Benning, Georgia. In 1970 he volunteered for duty in Vietnam where he served with Company C (Rgr), 75th Infantry, FFV/USARPAC as a scout-observer. Echanis received the Combat Infantryman Badge (CIB),
Purple Heart and
Bronze Star with "V" device for actions during a company size NVA ambush in which he is credited with saving the lives of six of his comrades. He was also awarded the Vietnamese Cross of Gallantry. Although severely wounded in his foot and ankle, Echanis was the only soldier capable of fighting back until help arrived in the form of U.S. helicopters. The closing paragraph of the Army's award narrative states: This incident is Echanis' only documented action during his Vietnam service. His service in the Army was a total of 15 months of which 2 months were served in Vietnam. He was evacuated to the military hospital in San Francisco where he made his recovery over seven months. Echanis' military record shows that during his short military career he did not attend or graduate from
Ranger School and that although he participated in
Phase One of the
Special Forces Qualification Course he did not, for administrative reasons, progress further.
Martial arts After his medical discharge in December 1970, Echanis returned to Ontario, Oregon. He renewed his study of
Judo and trained in
Karate with now
Ninjitsu Sensei Toshiro Nagato who had become a childhood friend According to a family member Echanis trained for a short time as a
boxer during this period. This was under Al Berro, who lived and trained fighters in Boise, Idaho. Echanis fought several times as a boxer in the heavyweight class but left boxing to continue his study of the Eastern martial arts. Echanis developed a two-week hand-to-hand Instructor combat course sponsored by the
United States Army John F. Kennedy Center for Military Assistance (USAJFKCENMA) at Fort Bragg, North Carolina. The program was authorized in December 1975 and Echanis was formally appointed the "Senior Instructor and Advisor to the USAJFKCENMA Hand to Hand Combat/Special Weapons School for Instructors" in a Memorandum For Record signed by Major Jerry C. Williams, then Chief, PSD, at the JFK Center. Six courses were presented in 1976. Echanis' combatives program was titled the "
Hwarangdo Hand to Hand and Special Weapons Program". The USAJFKCENMA, then commanded by Major General Robert C. Kingston, issued formal Certificates of Participation in the "Hwarang Do/Hand to Hand Combat School" to include the Instructor Course the participant attended. Both MG Kingston and Colonel Timothy G Cannon, Chief of Staff, signed the certificates. Joo Bang Lee, founder and then leader of the World Hwa Rang Do Association affixed his personal seal to each certificate which conferred Black Belt ranking on the participant. Echanis then moved on to Little Creek, Virginia and A.P. Hill where, courtesy of
Richard Marcinko, then the commanding officer of SEAL Team 2, he taught three 2-week H2H courses for the SEALs. These courses, titled "SEAL TEAM TWO Hwarang Do Hand to Hand Combat/Special Weapons and Special Tactics School for Instructors" were attested to in a memorandum signed by LT Commander Bruce Van Heertum, United States Navy. Van Heertum took over command of SEAL Team TWO upon Marcinko moving to his next assignment in Washington DC. Van Heertum designated Echanis as being appointed "...the permanent senior advisor and head instructor for the SEAL Team TWO Hand to Hand Combat/Special Weapons/Tactics School for Instructors."
Death On September 8, 1978, at 13:00, Echanis, fellow American mercenary Chuck Sanders, South Vietnamese mercenary Nguyen "Bobby" van Nguyen, and General Alegrett died in an aircraft accident at the mouth of the
Sapoá River near the Nicaragua/Costa Rican border. ==Books==