Misfit
Lawful neutral
http://www.thelocal.se/41518/20120618/
David Hemler, now 49, recently came forward after 28 years of hiding in plain sight in Sweden with an assumed identity.
In 1984, the then 21-year-old airman left the US Air Force's 6913th Electronic Security Squadron in Augsburg, Germany and eventually made his way to Stockholm.
While nearly three decades has passed since Hemler went AWOL, he remains a wanted man by the Air Force Office of Special Investigations (AFOSI), which confirmed that a man identifying himself as Hemler recently contacted the agency.
“We really want to catch this guy,” AFOSI spokesperson Linda Card told the New York Times.
Card's comments come on the heels of a report first published on Saturday in the Dagens Nyheter (DN) newspaper in which Hemler revealed his secret past.
After arriving in Sweden in 1984, Hemler eventually gained residency under a false name, attended university and, over time, built up a rather unassuming life as a father and husband, despite an admittedly dubious story about how he first ended up in Sweden.
"I made up a story that I had run away from my parents while they were traveling but nobody believed it," he told DN.
David Hemler, now 49, recently came forward after 28 years of hiding in plain sight in Sweden with an assumed identity.
In 1984, the then 21-year-old airman left the US Air Force's 6913th Electronic Security Squadron in Augsburg, Germany and eventually made his way to Stockholm.
While nearly three decades has passed since Hemler went AWOL, he remains a wanted man by the Air Force Office of Special Investigations (AFOSI), which confirmed that a man identifying himself as Hemler recently contacted the agency.
“We really want to catch this guy,” AFOSI spokesperson Linda Card told the New York Times.
Card's comments come on the heels of a report first published on Saturday in the Dagens Nyheter (DN) newspaper in which Hemler revealed his secret past.
After arriving in Sweden in 1984, Hemler eventually gained residency under a false name, attended university and, over time, built up a rather unassuming life as a father and husband, despite an admittedly dubious story about how he first ended up in Sweden.
"I made up a story that I had run away from my parents while they were traveling but nobody believed it," he told DN.