Mike Turpin on the news set in Saigon. AFVNVETS.NET |
Nothing seemed unusual about Army Spc. 4 Mike Turpin. He was a respected TV newscaster during his time at AFVN in 1967-68. “When he went on the air as the new anchor, he had a new uniform and looked spic and span,” according to Army Spc. 5 John Mikesch, who was the technical director for Turpin’s newscasts. “He had a mature, experienced presentation. He was perfect.”
To most people who knew him, Turpin hardly seemed like a
person who would die under mysterious circumstances, yet that is what happened
in 1972 after he left the military and strangely returned to
Turpin in the field (right, foreground) with 1st Infantry Div. Courtesy Matt Turpin |
Off-camera, Turpin, who spoke at least five languages, led a
life that was a perilous concoction of one part adventure and one part danger. Prior
to arriving at AFVN, he served with the 1st Infantry Division in
Turpin joined the Merchant Marine at age 16 in 1944 but
changed course the next year and enlisted in the Army in April 1945. He served
in
Turpin, who went by “Mike” but whose given name was Ira
Leslie Turpin, was born Jan. 29, 1928, in
When Turpin died, officially in April 1972 at age 44, he was
in
Trouble at International House
International House in 1966. John F. Cordova Courtesy Manh Hai |
Customers at the International House tended to be “high military people, high-ranking Vietnamese people, Indian people, Arab people. French people,” said Doris Hochberger, Lily’s daughter, who used to go there with her mother, who died in 1988.
The International House had several thousand members, according to a wartime column by Daniel Cameron in the Saigon Post. “You paid a $20 membership fee and then ate low-priced steaks, drank the PX booze, played the slot machines and had companionship,” Cameron wrote. “American civilians went there in droves,” he said.
Some
“Everybody got subpoenaed at International House,”
At age 6, Doris learned to swim at the exclusive Cercle Sportif Club |
Jocelyn Turpin, the daughter of Turpin with his third wife, Joyce, was researching the family’s complicated history when she came across connections between the International House and a scam involving diamonds imported through the Post Exchange.
Clark Mollenhoff, a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist for
the Des Moines Register in
Family members believe Turpin and Lily were both subpoenaed
to testify before a federal grand jury and a U.S. Senate subcommittee
investigating
There was no official allegation linking the couple to illicit activities at the International House, but Turpin’s affluence did not go unnoticed.
“My mother had a lot of diamonds,”
Turpin also had a virtual arsenal in his house. “In my parent’s room, under their armoires, he had AK-47 and M16 rifles, grenades, all kinds of stuff,”
Doris provided the photo, at left, of her mom on the firing range with an M16 rifle in 1968.
Jocelyn believes Turpin might have been profiting from the black market. “Clearly he was involved with something,” she said. “I think a lot of people wanted him dead for the information he had.”
Killed in Combat
Theory
After the family moved to the United States in 1969, Turpin
bought a house for his parents in Florida, a car for his family and a brand new
sports car convertible for another relative—all in cash. “Dad never wrote a
check and did not have a credit card,”
Mikesch with radio starlet Chris Noel. AFVN photo. |
“He’d gone back to
Mikesch believes that Turpin was killed in combat: “In one of those skirmishes that he was involved in they were overrun. Something went wrong . . . so that was the mystery of how it all ended.”
When Jocelyn attended a reunion and talked with Turpin’s buddies from the 1st Infantry Division, she heard more speculation that her dad was “military intelligence.”
Died of Nature Causes Theory
In a letter to the family, U.S. Embassy Consul General Malcolm Hallam wrote that Turpin’s landlord found the former soldier dead in his room in late April 1972. “He was sitting in a chair dressed in pajamas with his head and upper torso slumped over . . . and his head resting on a small table,” the letter said. “There was no visible evidence of violence within the room.” Congealed blood from Turpin’s nose and mouth covered the top of the table. Vietnamese police “found no evidence of foul play,” Hallam stated.
Mike and Lily at their International House wedding reception. |
The body was flown to
“Mom said it could have been anyone,”
Bar Brawl Theory
Another theory comes from former Army Spc. 5 Dick Ellis, who
worked with Turpin at AFVN and ran his teleprompter for the 6 p.m. news. After
Turpin left the military and returned to the
Jocelyn Turpin holds her dad's photo. |
Standing over 6 feet tall, Turpin was an imposing man and
gritty. Before his time at AFVN, he was a reporter and anchorman at TV station WTOP
(now WUSA) in
CIA Theory
One of the most tantalizing clues about Turpin’s death came
from a man who visited Lily in
From her room, Doris could see photographs Olson had brought,
including an 8-by-10-inch black-and-white print that showed a man leaning over
with his head on a desk, an image similar to the scene described in the U.S.
consul general’s letter. The man’s face was not visible. “It looked like it was
staged,”
Jocelyn didn’t see the photo but also thinks the death scene was staged, based on the embassy’s description of the hotel room. No identifying features were given, and the lack of an autopsy prevents other confirmation, she said.
Jocelyn has conducted a tenacious search for official records, photographs, credentials and internet corroboration. Rather than answering questions, however, that documentation often raises new ones.
For example, personal possessions that the embassy recovered from Turpin’s room and returned to the family include clothing, his passport, and items like his wrist watch and toothbrush. “I think what is unusual is what is missing,” Jocelyn said. “Where are his pipes and books? He never went without those.”
Why did Mike have this photo in Saigon? He's at the head of the table. |
And what about this mystery woman? |
“He used to tell everybody he was in importing and
exporting,”
Doris and Jocelyn are not blaming the CIA but believe any work Turpin might have done for the agency could have contributed to his death.
Mike Did Not Die Theory
This theory also places Turpin in a life-threatening situation, but instead of being killed he disappears to save his life or escape other problems.
About 20 years ago, this cryptic posting appeared on a now-obsolete AFVN discussion group: “Joe Ciokon was the daily War News Editor and the 6 PM TV news anchor for the American Forces Vietnam Network . . . he relieved an Army sergeant named Mike Turpin . . . strictly a “soldier of fortune” who only came out for wars and conflicts [and] had a penthouse apartment at the International Hotel (he was probably a spook) and R&R’d in Tokyo a lot.”
Although there is nothing definitive establishing Mike as a mercenary or a spy, his extravagant lifestyle caught the eye of AFVN colleagues—and perhaps others who wanted something from him.
Turpin had good reasons to vanish, Jocelyn said. “A lot of
people were looking for him, everything from ex-wives to family friction.” In
this theory, she continued, “he picked the perfect place knowing they had no autopsy
facilities for civilians in
AFVN Memories
Some of Turpin’s best days in
Mike's picture of bombing scene. |
Turpin was also a dedicated writer, even taking a portable
typewriter into the field. “He also contributed to a story for Alfred Hitchcock
[who hosted a television show that focused on mysteries],”
As terrorist bombings became more frequent downtown, Lily
was growing more frightened. The family moved to the spacious home outside
Mike, second from left, at the Turpin residence outside Saigon. |
Her stepfather’s favorite song was “Those Were the Days,” recorded
by Mary Hopkin in 1968. “Dad would hold a glass of Old Forester and sing,” she
said. “I remember him playing “Those Were the Days” and singing at the top of
his voice. He used to just wail it.”
But there were skeletons in Turpin’s closet, Jocelyn discovered. During the first of his Army enlistments, Turpin lied about his age—he was just 17—and signed up using a fictitious name. For some reason, he walked away from boot camp. He was court-martialed for desertion, sentenced to two years and released with a dishonorable discharge.
"The grief and shame from this situation almost killed his mom and dad," Jocelyn believes. She adds that her father "spent the rest of his life trying to make up for that big mistake."
Turpin on patrol in 1966 along the Song Be River northeast of Saigon. |
"For those that loved and respected my dad, but were confused by some of his choices," Jocelyn said, that dark episode in his life "explains so much. Without knowing this, any real understanding of who he truly was is incomplete."
Turpin's behavior might even be a model for redemption, she believes. "If it helps even one more person to understand and forgive him, or maybe inspires them to get over a rough patch in their own life and overcome their past mistakes, I feel good about it."
Like families of troops missing in action and still waiting for news of their loved ones, Turpin’s children crave closure. “I have lived with this forever,”
Mike Turpin: Father, soldier and journalist. |
Weighing the various theories of his father’s death, Matt said: “Whether it’s the bar fight or he died of some quasi natural causes or it’s something nefarious, it’s possible. I’m less inclined to think about a government cover-up.”
Jocelyn quotes her mother: “Mom said she thought he was doing something for the government and doing something important, and somebody killed him.”
There is common family agreement on this much: Turpin was a decent man, a courageous soldier and a talented journalist.
Rick Fredericksen served as a Marine newsman at American Forces Vietnam Network 1969-70.