An Air Force officer who deserted the military in 1983 has been located in California, where he was living under a false name, according to authorities.
The Air Force Office of Special Investigations announced late last week that William Howard Hughes Jr. had been apprehended "without incident."
Hughes, who had top-secret clearance when he was in the Air Force, worked on classified NATO systems, the AFOSI says. He deserted in July 1983 after a temporary assignment in the Netherlands, and was last seen around Albuquerque, N.M., withdrawing $28,500 from 19 different bank locations.
"Interviews of friends, associates and coworkers failed to disclose information regarding Hughes' whereabouts," the AFOSI wrote. "Checks with law enforcement agencies both in the United States and overseas also failed to locate him."
But more than 30 years after he dropped off the grid, Hughes was caught. The U.S. State Department was investigating Hughes — who claimed to be "Barry O'Beirne" — for possible passport fraud when he revealed his true identity.
"Capt. Hughes claimed that in 1983 he was depressed about being in the Air Force so he left, created the fictitious identity of O'Beirne and has been living in California ever since," the Air Force writes.
The Albuquerque Journal has more on the search for Hughes in 1983:
His car was found at the Albuquerque airport and a search of his home in the 1900 block of Chandelle Loop NE revealed notes of planned activities and books to read upon his return, according to reports.
After the Air Force formally declared Hughes a deserter in December 1983, his family said in an Associated Press article printed in the Journal on Jan. 20, 1984, they believed he had been abducted.
Hughes was unmarried when he disappeared, but the Seattle native had three sisters.
"We do not feel he disappeared voluntarily," his sister, Christine Hughes, said in the article.
In 1986, journalist Tad Szulc wrote in a Los Angeles Times op-ed piece that at least some intelligence officers "believe that Hughes was either captured by Soviet agents or voluntarily defected to the Soviet Union." Those officers suggested Hughes may have been linked to possible sabotage of some failed U.S. and French rocket launches.
A spokeswoman for the Air Force Office of Special Investigations told the Albuquerque Journal there's no sign Hughes leaked classified information or was involved with the Soviet Union, but that investigations are underway.
"Until we have the whole story, we don't have the story," she told the newspaper.
Copyright 2018 NPR. To see more, visit www.npr.org. With additional reporting from Associated Press.