James "Bo" Gritz (born January 18, 1939 in Enid, Oklahoma) was a highly decorated United States Army Special Forces officer during the Vietnam War whose post-war activities-notably attempted POW rescues-have proven controversial. He remained a Special Forces officer until he resigned his commission in 1979. Wikipedia
Bo Gritz (rhymes with "rights"), a former Green Beret and highly decorated veteran of the Vietnam War, became a prominent figure on the right-wing fringe after leading unsuccessful commando-style missions to rescue alleged American POW's in Vietnam in the www.adl.org/learn/ext_us/gritz.asp?xpicked=2&item=5
The first person to come to the government with a plan to rescue the alleged POWs was retired Army Colonel James "Bo" Gritz. www.aiipowmia.com/reports/masters.html
The Thai-English newspapers printed a story saying U.S. Embassy officials were officially inquiring as to Bo Gritz presence along the border. www.aiipowmia.com/ssc/gritz.html
First, and least of all, me. I am James Gordon Gritz, aka Bo Gritz, Jim Garr, Jimmy Wilks, Patrice Clark, Je rome Curtis; my agent code names include: Bear, SwampFox, WildCat, JamesBond, Maurder, ChinaBoy -- among others. www.bogritz.com/
This was not the first time that Gritz, whom Gen. William Westmoreland once called, "The American Soldier," missed his mark. www.hydeparkmedia.com/gritz.html
The definitive Wikipedia entry for Bo Gritz. Wikipedia is the biggest multilingual free-content encyclopedia on the Internet. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bo_Gritz
... Fields Dan Gayman Bo Gritz Matt Hale Richard Kelly Hoskins David Irving Mark Koernke David Lane Alex Linder Tom Metzger Pete Peters William Pierce Ted ... www.adl.org/learn/ext_us/gritz.asp?xpicked=2&item=5