Captain Counts was commanding USS Towers on an August night when his shipboard radar indicated what appeared to be surface contacts similar to those reported in the same area during the Tonkin Gulf incident two years earlier. Darkness prevented visual confirmation as the ships on PIRAZ and nearby search and rescue (SAR) stations maneuvered to defend against possible torpedo boat attack. The radar echoes abruptly disappeared when USS Towers fired a star shell to illuminate the area. Officers evaluated the situation as flocks of cormorant which dispersed when startled by the star shell. The official report of the event received limited distribution to avoid embarrassing PresidentLyndon B. Johnson.[2]
Counts was employed through the first decade of his retirement from naval service by Hughes Aircraft Company as assistant division manager for engineering services and support and as manager for the spares program office within the Ground Systems Group in Fullerton, California. He was active with San Diego civic organizations until passing away from complications of Alzheimer's disease in 2015.
^ ab"Obituaries: RADM Stanley Thomas Counts, USN (Ret) '49". The USNA Alumni Association San Diego Chapter Newsletter (May). The USNA Alumni Association: 2&3. 2015.