Nope, no doubt on that one. No way a B-25 had a ten-man crew, among other things. I've been in both a 24 and a 35, on the ground. Also, back then, I knew the silhouette of every plane there was, from the side or from below. Did fair at head-on, too. Knew all the nicknames of the Jap stuff. We had kids' books with pictures and silhouettes of everything from everywhere.
Anyway, he had a few photos. Sidebar: He got back, and three days later we got a telegram from the War Department saying he was missing in action.
The B-25 was a good plane. At one point, a 75mm cannon was added. Sorta rough on the airframe. Not popular. "Great idea! Wish it worked!"
My stepfather's brother was at McDill Army Air Corps Base at Tampa, training on B-26s when the war ended. The motto there was, "One a day in Tampa Bay." The laminar-flow wing meant a rather high stall speed.
Art