Carl John Pequignot, the phony hero of WWII
Our buddy, Doug Sterner sends us the story of mighty Carl John Pequignot as recorded by the Fort Wayne Journal Gazette last year;
John Pequignot was severely wounded three times but not before he killed an estimated 100 enemy soldiers.
He was involved in three of the worst battles of World War II – Saipan , Iwo Jima and Okinawa .
An enemy soldier threw a grenade at Pequignot, who caught it and threw it back. A game of catch ensued and the grenade exploded midair about 10 feet from Pequignot. The blast ripped off much of Pequignot’s face. He would eventually undergo 31 surgeries. Fifteen Marines came forward and donated parts of their hip bones to replace the broken bones in Pequignot’s face. Once home, the Navy again denied Pequignot’s veterans benefits, but the Fort Wayne doctors who fixed his face never billed him a penny, Pequignot said, tears welling in his eyes.
Recuperating in a hospital in Okinawa , Pequignot observed a stranger walking among the cots and staring at several patients before moving to Pequignot’s bedside. Pequignot, who had grabbed the pistol he always kept under his pillow and was now holding it under the sheets, watched the man through half-closed eyes. When the man pulled out a 12-inch knife and prepared to bring it down in Pequignot’s chest, Pequignot fired twice, killing the intruder – whose intention had been to kill and rob some of the patients.
Although the wound bothers him to this day and he had leg surgery as recently as 2010, Pequignot said he has repeatedly been denied compensation or disability because the Navy neglected to document his time overseas.
That article followed another one about Pequinot in the Fort Wayne News Sentinel summarized by Doug;
Credited with saving himself and six other wounded Marines by killing 24 enemy soldiers, John Pequignot was invited to the White House, where the president proclaimed that “no person could do more than this man who unselfishly put his life on the line multiple times” and noted that he had been nominated for the Congressional Medal of Honor.
President Harry S. Truman, who presented an honorary sword to Pequignot during his White House visit in July 1946, noted that the citation awarded that day would have been greater if not for Geiger’s nomination, which for some reason fell into a bureaucratic black hole never to re-emerge.
Normally, a Naval Medal of Honor must be awarded within five years of the event. But a member of Congress can request that period be extended, which is why Pequignot’s advocates have been lobbying for Sen. Richard Lugar’s intervention. Joe O’Donnell, Lugar’s legislative assistant, said the numerous letters sent on Pequignot’s behalf have been forwarded to the Navy – without a recommendation from Lugar one way or another. “He wasn’t comfortable doing that. I’m not sure the medal has ever been given this late (after the actual events).”
He also gave this interview to the Library of Congress prompted by Senator Richard Lugar’s office in which he documents his escape as a POW in the Phillipines. Sterner summarizes the video and presents reasons to doubt Pequignot’s tale;
Pequignot was assigned to a PC boat, which hit a mine in November/December 1943. Ten of the 14 men were killed, Pequignot and three others survived. (In fact, the first PC boat damaged or destroyed in the Pacific was PC 1124 which was damaged in the Leyte operation in November 1944, and the first PC Boat destroyed in the Pacific was PC 1129 which was sunk in the Philippines in January 1945. Here are the PC Boat incidents: http://www.ww2pcsa.org/patrol-craft.html
After their PC boat was sunk, Pequignot and his three comrades survived for four days before being picked up by a Japanese submarine, sailed to Manila , and marched inland to be interned in a POW Camp. (Pequignot does NOT appear in any of the WWII POW lists, which are quite complete. There is a James R. Pequignot, U.S. Army Air Forces who was shot down and captured in the European Theater, who was also from Indiana . Could this be an identity of a REAL POW he stole?)
In his LOC interview he talks of the most famous POW in the camp he was in, legendary Gregory “Pappy” Boyington. In fact, Boyington was shot down and held on RABAUL before being sent to a camp in Japan . I am not aware that Boyington was ever held in the Philippine Islands. Boyington was shot down January 4, 1944 .
In his LOC interview he describes how he was rescued. The 6th Army Ranger Battalion trained at Camp Lejeune for the rescue and, in the spring of 1944, landed by submarine off Luzon, marched inland, stormed the POW camp and rescued Pequignot and 600 others, helped them to the coast, where they were recovered by submarine. Of course, the 6th Ranger Battalion DID effect a POW rescue…in January 1945 at Cabanatuan in the incident made famous in the movie “The Great Raid.” There was no attempt in early 1944 to rescue POWs in the PI, and the 6th Rangers were actually just being formed up and prepared to lead the invasion into the Philippine Islands that wasn’t to occur for another six months.
The rescued POWs were taken by submarine to the hospital at Guam …a strange destination in the spring of 1944… Guam was still in Japanese hands. The invasion of Guam did not come until August 1944.
After four weeks of medical training, Pequignot became a Corpsman, landing with Marines at Saipan , Iwo Jima and Okinawa. These were operations by DIFFERENT UNITS, so he must have really been bounced around.
Pequignot induced Senator Lugar to award him a Purple Heart Medal, but according to Doug, the Navy called BS on the citation. Here’s it is for your perusal;

Doug summarizes;
We believe, but haven’t verified, that Peguignot may have been a Navy Boatswain’s Mate First Class serving aboard the Aircraft Carrier U.S.S. Shangri-La in World War II. We do not believe he was ever a Corpsman, or ever landed on Japanese-occupied shores. There is no evidence he earned a Silver Star or one, much less three, Purple Hearts. There is no evidence he was every a Prisoner of War.
I especially enjoyed the part wherein Peguinot played “hot potato” with a Japanese soldier with a grenade. I think after the guy thrown the grenade back to me the first time, I would have thrown it somewhere someone wouldn’t be throwing it back to me especially if it hadn’t gone off after three seconds. But that’s just me, I’m just a coward, I guess.
You can tell by the interview video that this isn’t the first time he’s told these tales. I’m surprised that the Library of Congress couldn’t check the chronology of his stories. I mean,they’re a library after all.
Category: Phony soldiers
I agree, the best part was when I read “a game of catch ensued”. WTF?
Why do people continue to fall for these bullshit stories???
Where can I buy a new BS meter and flag? My meter just exploded into a bazillion teeny tiny little bits and my BS flag just instantaneously caught fire in my back pocket!?
Where can I buy a new BS meter and flag? My meter just exploded into a bazillion teeny tiny little bits and my BS flag just instantaneously combusted in my back pocket!?
Amazing bullshit! I bet when he went fishing he had some great stories. Playing catch with a frag? that’s the funniest thing I’ve heard all day. Thanks for the humor.
I’m assuming the format for the Purple Heart has changed, because my son’s states, after the header, “To All Who Shall See” etc.
But, I’m surprised that Pequod, er, Peguignot didn’t tell the Journal Gazette that after the Japanese threw him the grenade, that he turned an M-1 around and batted it back to him, screaming, That’s for Babe Ruth.
Does no one think this bullshit can’t be checked? I know that they know the local fish wrap likely won’t check their story, but, come on, there’s too many out here who will.
The one small comfort here is that this old bugger will soon find himself standing in front of the men whose valor he stole.
I hope it is a very unpleasant encounter.
That would be my luck too. Laying in a hospital bed after all that fighting and killing to have someone try to sneak up on me with a knife. I would have just killed the bad guy with my bare hands though!
Remember when they busted Dan Rather for using computer fonts on the phony National Gard documents alleged to be from President George Bush? Well guess what, this dumb ass did the same thing. First, every Purple Heart, or medal Citation I have ever seen, is in a landscape format in color, not portrait format and black and white like this document. Secondly, the font is too evenly spaced for a 1945 vintage type writer to have typed. After downloading this into a graphics program, I confirmed that font style of the citation is Cooperplate Gothic Bold in Small Caps. This citation is completely bogus on these two accounts, let alone the fact that I have never seen a Purple Heart Citation go into the details of valor as this one has. This is completely bogus. I am not a font historian, but I do not think that Cooperplate Gothic Bold Small Caps was available on standard government issued typewriters in 1945.
Now these phonies are REALLY pissing me off, my brother in law was an Iwo Marine (3rd wave onto the beach). Two days into his stay on the island he was bleeding through enough cuts and wounds to earn 5 Purple Hearts.
When ask why he was never awarded a PH, he replied, “Hell, we were Marines doing what Marines are trained to do. You have to get hurt pretty bad to get of them pretty little ribbons. Glad I didn’t qualify for one”.
I would guess that they did not use hyphens in service numbers…at least I’ve never seen a service number given in that format.
If he was even a Gunners-Mate, he should know that the Navy has “Corpsmen” not “Combat Medics.”
Didn’t this guy also calibrate the Norton Bomb Site for the drop on Hiroshima after shooting down Yamamoto’s airplane?
I have seen multiple Purple Heart Citations from WWII thru the current conflicts, the words and appearance have changed very little. This aint one of the real ones.
This Pequignot guy makes me think of Hank Hills father, He tells a good story but there is no way it could have happened.
I forgot one other bogus feature of the bogus Purple Heart Citation, the real citation has a graphic of the purple heart medallion suspended between a purple ribbon on both sides, this bogus certificate shows an actual photo of a Purple Heart. This is complete BS.
It’s my understanding that the movie Commando was inspired by Peequads life as well.
Dude was a gunners mate combat medic, how cool is that?
I’ve never seen anyone sign their rank in their signature, especially on an official document.
has anyone noticed that the “general” scratched out an error when he signed?
Not to mention, hueydoc, the General looks to have signed with his nose. Every officer I know of either signs like a doctor or a calligrapher. From my great grandpa’s documents down to my awards. I have never seen a grade-school cursive signature.
[…] Not to mention that the one guy is wearing his fourragère completely wrong, or that his gig line is comically bad, and the other guy has three Purple Hearts side by side, and on and on… I wonder if his Purple Heart "citations" read like this guy's? […]
Well, I guess it’s FOIA time. Let’s see if this tool was actually stupid enough to use his real service number on the fake PH citation. If he did, that should make it rather easy for NPRC to find his records.
My dad, who died in 2005, fought on Saipan in the Army, he was wounded and awarded a purple heart. I am going to try to find his PH citation and see if they are in the same format. Not sure if the different services had different PH citations or not.
RLTW
a175darby:
Don’t think you’ll need to do that. Here’s an example of a USMC PH cert from Okinawa.
http://dmc.tamu-commerce.edu/cdm/singleitem/collection/uw/id/381/rec/4
Why is it the phony WWII guys always claim to have been in 3-4 MAJOR operations.
I’ve only met ONE Marine WWII vet (out of 1,000s thru vet functions) that actually did TWO major Operations (‘canal 1st Div then Iwo 5th Div)… it was with two different Divisions!
Although it was possible to do two MAJOR campaigns – some Regiments got rolled into new Divisions (Saipan – 2nd Div to Oki – 6th Div) it was rare. It was rarer to survive.
Jesus. I can’t even act surprised by the douchebaggery anymore.
God help me.
FOIA away. Want a copy when it comes in, Jonn?
This stuff kills me. Our friend LTC (ret.) Sydney Pugh served with distinction as an enlisted Para Marine in WWII throughout the Pacific Theater. Iwo Jima was one place. Sydney got out of the Marines when the wear ended, went to college, then joined the Army and graduated from OCS with my buddy. Sydney passed away years ago… I can’t help but think of him as this phony’s stories were comparable to his… but Sydney’s were true! He must be rolling in his grave.
@23..Thanks Hondo….I knew the posers looked to plain jane!
Googled “Roy S. Geiger signature” and found this. Doesn’t look like a match.
I know the grenade hot potato game, and faulty citation grabbed a lot of folks’ attention. But it’s the line about Marines lining up to donate parts of their hips that set off my BS meter. I spent my first five years as a dental tech working in the Oral Maxillofacial Department at Andrews AFB. Yes, bone marrow from the hip has been used in bone grafts for severe facial fractures dating back to the World War II. However, it was obtained from pre-staged tissue banks. The idea of Marines lining up having chunks of their pelvis removed at a field hospital to help their buddy, is about as realistic as his grenade-tossing story.
@12 Kevin, while this guy’s story is over the top, don’t steal stolen valor from two other guys who worked hard creating their own fantasies.
The guy who calibrated the bomb on Hiroshima? That was real-life soup sandwich Richard Ortega…at least he says so. http://valorguardians.com/blog/?p=25689
And everyone knows that Yamamoto was shot down by Ralph Cotton “steers with his knees” Lawson. Just ask him.
http://valorguardians.com/blog/?p=26233
Well, it looks like Pequignot has been using this Purple Heart “documentation” and passing himself off as a Purple Heart recipient since well after the Stolen Valor Act became effective.
http://www.acgsi.org/20thvet/pequignot.carl.pdf
Depending on just how this shakes out – and what the SCOTUS decides – the old fella could have some explaining to do to to Federal authorities regarding this little matter.
@#23, thanks Hondo. Confirms that the certificate hasn’t really changed since WWII through Afghnaistan.
@31 Hondo, dang he forged Harry Trumans signature too?
@#31 Hondo – Great stuff. The first time that I’ve ever seen an individual awarded a unit award, and by the President himself!
PhotoShoppus Maximus.
Damn, I wish I’d found that before I’d mailed the FOIA on this dipstick.
LMAO…Even checked the Truman Library site….This what the president was doing that day ….
http://www.trumanlibrary.org/photographs/search.php?access=selectbyhstkeyword&version=new&hstkeywordid=2&page=10&resultsorder=DateCreation
No pic of Truman awarding sword…ya might think that would make it to his library
Here is Trumans schedule for said day.
http://www.trumanlibrary.org/calendar/main.php?currYear=1946&currMonth=7&currDay=16
Wow, Good find Hondo. I never knew that Presidents issed “Unit” citations to individuals. As for the Truman signature, it appears to be an autopen. I have an official Selective Service Award Certificate for which I am trying to track down the original owner or family, and it has the exact signature on it in the same color. This cat found a copy of that signature online or in some other correspondence and photoshopped his document. I still can’t believe the phony Purple Heart certificate, it is wrong on so many levels. This guy is a fool who needs to face the music.
I sent a letter to Vivian Sade who wrote the article on him for the Journal Gazette. Will see if she is interested or not.
Here is her email:
vsade@jg.net
Look.
This cat was supa dupa sekrit. That means Truman awarded him in a bunker 73 miles below ground, secured by the OSS and its paramilitary arm LMNOP.
So OF COURSE there would be no documented proof of the award.
gawd. you guys don’t know nothin’
Curioser and curoiser . . . . .
http://fwnextweb1.fortwayne.com/ns/projects/history/2000/1950/atom3.php
Dunno if it’s the same guy or not – but the age is plausible, and both the name and town match.
WTF….Does the Sentinal not check their articles from their other articles at least!
Good work Hondo!
Yup–scratch someone bullshitting about their exploits, and find some more serious bullshit underneath.
Hondo, I find it far more plausible that this guy has a history of being a crooked cop than a war hero.
Better yet, do the math. His bio has his age as 85 as of last November. Assume he had his birthday already, making his year of birth 1925-26. He claims he quit school at 17, meaning he couldn’t have joined before 1943.
This guy made GM1 in less than two years? WTF?
“He wasn’t comfortable doing that. I’m not sure the medal has ever been given this late (after the actual events).”
Bullshit.
http://abclocal.go.com/kgo/story?section=news/local/peninsula&id=8508228
Yeah, it looks like it’s the same f**king guy. See the end of this article.
http://www.fortwayne.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/SE/20110428/NEWS/104280340
War hero my ass. I for one ain’t buying the BS w/o proof.
Hey coppers you’ll never catch me!! What a DW.
Same Guy. Dirty Cop. Got this from another source. Data is unconfirmed but have good reason to believe it is all legit:
He was a “bad cop” who was arrested for organizing a theft ring (stolen cars mostly, but other items of value, as well) in 1954 or 56 (I’m guessing on the dates as I am at home at not at work with my records). He served time and shortly after released was again arrested and convicted – in federal court – because he burglarized a store, but a post office was located in the same building. Served time again, got out, and robbed a bank!!
Doug…how the hell did he ever manage to get a city/county job with that kind of record????