Nguyễn Ngọc Loan continued to serve as Brigadier General and Chief of Police until he was wounded in action in May that year. In 1975, he fled South Vietnam during the
Fall of Saigon, emigrating eventually to the United States. Pressure from the
U.S. Congress resulted in an investigation by the
Library of Congress, which concluded that Lém's execution was illegal under South Vietnamese law. Loan died on July 14, 1998, in
Burke, Virginia, at the age of 67. The sole survivor of the massacre of Tuân's family (allegedly by Lém) was
Huan Nguyen; aged nine at the time, he was shot three times during the attack and stayed with his mother for two hours as she bled to death. In 2019, he became the highest-ranking Vietnamese-American officer in the U.S. military when he was promoted to the rank of
rear admiral in the
United States Navy. In 2012,
Douglas Sloan made a short movie, ''Saigon '68,'' about Adams' photograph. This movie details the influence it had on the lives of Adams and Loan, and on public opinion of the Vietnam War.
Saigon Story: Two Shootings in the Forest Kingdom, a 2026 documentary film by
Kim Nguyen, explored the ways in which the photograph had indelibly impacted the families of its main subjects. == See also ==