NATIONAL LEAGUE OF FAMILIES
OF AMERICAN PRISONERS AND MISSING IN SOUTHEAST ASIA
1005 NORTH GLEBE ROAD, SUITE 170, ARLINGTON, VIRGINIA 22201
PH (703) 465-7432 www.powmialeague.org FAX (703) 465-7433
ABOUT THE NATIONAL LEAGUE OF FAMILIES
The National League of
Families of American Prisoners and Missing in Southeast Asia was incorporated
in the District of Columbia on May 28, 1970. Voting membership is comprised of the wives, children,
parents, siblings and other close relatives of Americans who were or are listed
as prisoners of war, missing in action, killed in action/body not recovered and
returned Vietnam War U.S. POWs.
Associate membership is comprised of extended family relatives of
POW/MIAs who do not meet voting membership requirements, veterans and other
concerned citizens. The League is
a nonprofit, tax-exempt 501[c]3 (FEIN #23-7071242), humanitarian organization,
financed by contributions from the families, veterans and other concerned
Americans. The LeagueÕs sole
purpose is to obtain the release of all prisoners, the fullest possible
accounting for the missing and repatriation of all recoverable remains of those
who died serving our nation during the Vietnam War in Southeast Asia.
The League originated on the west coast in the
late 1960s. The wife of a ranking
POW, believing that the U.S. GovernmentÕs policy of keeping a low profile on
the POW/MIA issue and encouraging the families to refrain from publicly
discussing the problem was unjustified, initiated a loosely organized movement
which evolved into the National League of POW/MIA Families. In October 1968,
the first POW/MIA story was published.
As a result of that publicity, the families began communicating with
each other, and the group grew in strength from 50 to 100, to 300, and kept
growing. Small POW/MIA family
groups flooded the North Vietnamese delegation in Paris with telegraphic
inquiries regarding the prisoners and missing, the first major activity in
which hundreds of families participated.
Eventually, the necessity for formal incorporation
was recognized. In May 1970, a
special ADHOC meeting of the families met at Constitution Hall in Washington,
D.C., at which time the LeagueÕs charter and by-laws were adopted. Elected by the voting membership, now
approximately 1,000 family members, a seven-member Board of Directors meets
regularly to determine League policy and direction. Regional Coordinators, responsible for activities in
multi-state areas, and State Coordinators represent the League in most states.
The LeagueÕs national
office is now staffed by only one full-time employee, augmented by concerned
citizen and family member volunteers and university-level interns. The
executive director, an MIA sister and the organizationÕs chief executive
officer, is responsible for management of the League and implementation of
policies established by the membership and the Board of Directors.