A simple line of text, one sentence, is all that was noted in the official record of Mission 324 for 27 April 1944:
“21 B-24s are dispatched on CARPETBAGGER operations; 1 B-24 is lost”
Chuckie and his fellow crewman took off from Harrington at 22:26 hours on their 5th mission assigned to the 801st. They flew on a secret course to the South West France on an Operational Mission code named Operation Lackey 3A for drop site Timdale. They were one of the 1st crews to fly at night without benefit of the full moon.
The plane never returned to home base.
Specially modified B-24Ds were used in classified missions. In a joint venture between the Army Air Forces and the Office of Strategic Services (OSS) code named Operation Carpetbagger. Pilots and crews flew specially modified B-24Ds painted with a glossy black anti-searchlight paint to supply friendly underground forces throughout German occupied Europe. Being some 500 ft above sea level and located not too far away from the supply bases of Cheddington and Holme as well as the British SOE based at Tempsford, Harrington was chosen for the Carpetbagger Operations by the Eighth Air Force’s Special Operation Group in which Chuckie served.
Like all Allied forces who operated behind Nazi lines, Chuckie and the Carpetbaggers were subject to torture and execution in the event of capture, under Hitler‘s notorious Commando Order. Because the teams normally operated in uniform, to apply this order to them was a war crime.
Report 262 noted the result of the Operation as MIA. The Air Forces Organization was required to file a Missing Air Crew Report (MACR) within 48 hours.

