Former 421st FS Airman reunites with retirement F-16 after 26 years Published May 12, 2026 By Richard Essary 75th Air Base Wing Public Affairs HILL AIR FORCE BASE, Utah -- On July 20, 2000, Stu Scripter stood next to an F-16 Fighting Falcon for his retirement ceremony, closing the final chapter of his military career. Recently, under the fluorescent lights of the depot swing shift, he crossed paths with the exact same aircraft. Scripter, a Dansville, Michigan, native who retired from the U.S. Air Force’s 421st Fighter Squadron of the 388th Fighter Wing, is now a civilian employee working for the 573rd Aircraft Maintenance Squadron on the Ogden Air Logistics Complex’s F-16 aircraft production line. When a familiar tail number rolled into the hangar for maintenance, it sparked a reunion more than two decades in the making. Because the last four digits of the jet's tail number match his old squadron, the aircraft immediately caught his eye. “As soon as I saw 88-0421, I recognized it as the 421st Fighter Squadron commander’s aircraft from when I was there,” Scripter said. “It’s the same bird that was in my retirement ceremony.” The photo of Scripter standing beside that specific jet serves as his social media profile picture today. For aviation professionals, aircraft often represent more than just metal and wire; they are tangible reminders of long hours, deployments, dedication to the mission, and the people that served. “I deployed with the 421st on multiple trips to Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Singapore and Nellis AFB, and we always had 88-0421 with us as a physical symbol, representing all our squadron in the air,” he said. During his active-duty career, Scripter worked on the aircraft’s avionics systems. Fast forward 26 years, he found himself performing similar work on the exact same jet in the depot, troubleshooting and repairing its electronic systems to ensure it was ready to return to the flight line. The aircraft has since completed its maintenance cycle and departed Hill to return to its operational unit, but seeing his old jet fully mission-capable left a lasting impression. “It feels good to see it still flying, burning holes in the sky and taking the fight to the bad guys,” Scripter said. Just before the F-16 took to the skies, Scripter was able to meet the jet one last time to capture a new photo alongside the familiar tail number. “Same man, same aircraft, same base—just 26 years in difference,” he said.