In June 1944, the
27th Infantry Division landed on Saipan as part of the
Allied effort to take the
Mariana Islands. On July 7, Carneal's 105th Infantry Regiment took a heavy attack from the Japanese defending Saipan. The 105th Infantry Regiment took over 900
casualties including Carneal. However, his body was not found and he was declared
missing in action. Carlton Carneal, William Carneal's nephew, told
NPR that his uncle had a pact with three friends, so that if anything happened to one of them, the remaining friends would tell the families of the others what had happened. Because of this, the Carneal family knew what had happened to William Carneal. According to Carlton Carneal, while William Carneal was firing his gun at attacking Japanese soldiers, a Japanese soldier jumped into his
foxhole from behind and detonated a
hand grenade, killing both of them. In March 2013, Kuentai, a Japanese nonprofit organization that searches for bodies of Japanese soldiers found his remains under more than of clay along with the remains of four other American soldiers. The group also found his
dog tags, belt buckle, poncho, a pocket watch, loose change, and his 1939
class ring. Even though these artifacts were found with the remains, the United States Army did not declare them as Carneal's until
DNA testing confirmed his identity on December 4, 2013. ==Honored 70 years later==