Roy Hoffmann

Rear Admiral Roy F. "Latch" Hoffmann, U.S. Navy (retired) (born 1925) was Chairman of the former Swift Boat Veterans for Truth, established May 4, 2004, in opposition to John Kerry's candidacy for U.S. President, and which disbanded on May 31, 2008. As a naval officer, he patrolled the Mekong Delta on swift boats during the Vietnam War.[1]

Roy F. Hoffmann
Nickname(s)"Latch"
Service/branchUnited States Navy
RankRear Admiral

Early life

Hoffmann attended the University of Notre Dame. He was commissioned through the Naval ROTC program on June 1, 1946.[2]

Military career

In an article for Salon, Joe Conason described Hoffmann as "a cigar-chomping former Vietnam commander once described as 'the classic body-count guy' who 'wanted hooches destroyed and people killed.'" [3]

Civilian career

Following his retirement from the Navy, he was a port director in Milwaukee, Wisconsin before being removed from the post.[4]

Hoffmann claimed he got involved with the Swift Boat Veterans for Truth after reading Douglas Brinkley's book Tour of Duty, which, among other things, detailed Kerry's Swift Boat duty in Vietnam; he told The Washington Post, "I couldn't bear that someone was betraying us and being a dastardly liar. If I can be any more plain than that, I don't know."[5]

In 2009, the Admiral Roy F. Hoffmann Foundation ceased operations.[6]

gollark: Well I hope you're available soon. I don't know what we would do without limited followthrough on pointless vague probably impossible threats.
gollark: Hmmmmm.
gollark: Perhaps <@270035320894914560> wants to change the username on one of their alts again.
gollark: What is taking you so long? All you need to do is stand outside of claims and sort of vaguely threaten to destroy things which you can't.
gollark: That isn't shortly.

References

Further reading

  • Symmes, Weymouth D. This Is Latch: The Rear Admiral Roy F. Hoffmann Story. Missoula, Mont: Pictorial Histories Pub. Co, 2007. ISBN 9781575101378
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.