Tours of Duty Releases New Account in Sean Flynn and Dana Stone Case, Raising Questions About DPAA’s Handling of Living Witness Lead

The truth of what happened after he vanished into Cambodia — and for answers about why a living witness account that could change the final chapter of his life was not pursued with the urgency it deserved.

Washington DC – May 28, 2026 – Tours of Duty has released a new account involving Sean Flynn and Dana Stone, two of the most famous missing journalists of the Vietnam War era, challenging long-standing assumptions about what happened after the men disappeared in Cambodia in 1970.

Flynn, the son of Hollywood legend Errol Flynn, and fellow war correspondent Dana Stone vanished on April 6, 1970, while traveling by motorcycle through Cambodia. For more than half a century, the accepted public narrative has been that the men were captured by Communist forces in eastern Cambodia and likely died within months.

The new Tours of Duty account raises a far more explosive possibility: that Flynn and Stone may have survived for years in captivity, were later swept into the collapse of Cambodia under the Khmer Rouge, and may have been seen alive in an area where official accounts have long maintained Americans were not present.

According to the account, the record shows that a living witness came forward years ago with information suggesting Flynn and Stone did not die in 1970, but may have survived until 1976. The witness, a former naval officer under Lon Nol who was herself hunted after the regime fell, claimed she saw three Americans and one unidentified European male tied to a tamarack tree after they had been recaptured near the Thai border.

The witness account describes a harrowing scene: foreign prisoners bound to a tree, a murdered guide, Khmer Rouge guards, and a woman in hiding who risked her own life to cut the men loose, bring them food, and help them try to escape.

If true, the account would not merely add a new detail to the Flynn and Stone case. It would challenge the timeline, geography, and assumptions that have shaped one of the most infamous unresolved disappearances of the Vietnam War era.

Tours of Duty says the witness reporting was placed into official channels more than seven years ago, but the Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency failed to pursue it with urgency and failed to notify Sean Flynn’s sister, Rory Flynn, of the new reporting.

The newly released account argues that this failure reflects a broader collapse inside America’s POW/MIA accounting mission. According to information provided to Tours of Duty, DPAA has more than 800 employees but only two personnel functioning under the title of “analyst” for the Vietnam conflict, and those roles are primarily archival and historical rather than true cold-case analysis billets.

The organization argues that Vietnam-era cases cannot be solved through paperwork, laboratory production metrics, or passive case management. They require HUMINT development, witness correlation, link analysis, route reconstruction, and disciplined testing of conflicting narratives before first-generation witnesses die and the last living memory of these cases disappears.

Over the last year, Tours of Duty helped arrange for the witness to revisit the site connected to her account. That effort led to the identification of four additional witnesses and several new leads regarding the possible disposition of the three Americans and one unidentified European male.

The organization says that progress demonstrates what active pursuit should look like: preserving a living lead, testing the account, locating additional witnesses, developing new lines of inquiry, and ensuring the family finally knows someone is pursuing the truth with urgency.

The Flynn and Stone case is now being presented not only as a legendary missing-journalist mystery, but as a test of whether the U.S. government’s accounting mission still functions when credible outside leads challenge old assumptions, diplomatic comfort, and bureaucratic inertia.

Tours of Duty is calling for congressional oversight and a transparent lead-review pipeline requiring DPAA to notify families when new reporting is received, provide written justification when outside leads are rejected or delayed, and create an independent escalation pathway when credible evidence is not pursued.

The promise was never no man left behind unless the case is old, inconvenient, or politically uncomfortable. The promise was no man left behind.

Sean Flynn, Dana Stone, and the others in this account have waited long enough.

About Tours of Duty

Tours of Duty is a veteran-led nonprofit organization dedicated to advancing unresolved POW/MIA cases through field investigation, witness development, historical research, advanced technology, and support for families still waiting for answers.

Media Contact:

Michael Luehring

Senior Mission Attache, Tours of Duty

m.luehring@toursofduty.org

202-539-9615

www.toursofduty.org

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Website: https://toursofduty.org/