For families of some 9/11 victims, new
DNA tools reopen old wounds
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[September 10, 2018]
By Gabriella Borter and Barbara Goldberg
NEW YORK (Reuters) - A breakthrough in DNA
analysis is helping identify more victims of the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks
in New York, but the scientific advance is of little consolation for
families of those whose remains may have been buried in a Staten Island
landfill.
The official death toll in the attacks on lower Manhattan's World Trade
Center is 2,753, including the missing and presumed dead. Only 1,642 of
them, or about 60 percent, have been positively identified.
The New York City Medical Examiner's Office has worked for 17 years to
identify the remaining 1,100 victims. Using advances in DNA extraction
techniques over the past five years, it has made five more
identifications.
The advances have been bittersweet for 9/11 families who unsuccessfully
fought to stop the city from making a park out of Staten Island's
enormous Fresh Kills landfill, where 1.8 million tons of Twin Towers
debris was dumped and buried.
"We are grateful that the identification continues, but there is more
material that could have been part of that had the city not been so
cavalier with us," said Diane Horning, who led a failed court battle by
a group called World Trade Center Families for Proper Burial that hoped
block the park project.
Horning led the group, although her son Matthew was one of those
identified early on. Matthew, 26, a database administrator for an
insurance company, was working the 95th floor of the North Tower when
the planes hit.
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New York's Second Circuit Court of Appeals found in 2009 that
accusations that the city had mishandled the remains at Fresh Kills
amounted to "lack of due care," which was not sufficient to successfully
sue the city.
New York officials said at the time that the city did not intend to be
insensitive or offend victims' families.
To create the park, Fresh Kills Landfill was covered with layers of soil
and other materials to prevent the release of toxic gas from decomposing
trash into the atmosphere, according to the Freshkills Park Alliance,
New York City’s nonprofit partner in developing the park.
Charles Wolf lost his wife Katherine on September 11 and her remains
have not been identified.
If they are in the sealed landfill, he considers it "God's will" and he
is "at peace" with it.
"What’s the remedy? Dig everything up and risk exposing all those toxins
again to the environment?, Wolf said. "No, that’s not the answer,
because all of a sudden now the cure is worse than the disease.”
SCIENTIFIC BREAKTHROUGH
The ability to identify more victims is the latest chapter in a saga of
pain that began on the morning of Sept. 11, 2001, when two airliners
crashed into the Twin Towers of the World Trade Center.
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Andrew Schweighardt holds a vial with a DNA sample at the office of
the Chief Medical Examiner of New York during an event in New York
City, New York, U.S., September 6, 2018. REUTERS/Carlo Allegri
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Destruction of the Twin Towers was part of the coordinated
hijackings of four airliners by al-Qaeda militants that killed
nearly 3,000 people in New York, Washington and western
Pennsylvania, where one of the planes crashed in a farm field. The
attacks triggered an escalation of U.S. military involvement in the
Middle East that persists to this day.
A scientific breakthrough in the extraction of genetic material was
made this year and announced by the New York City chief medical
examiner last week, as the 17th anniversary of the attacks
approached.
The new technique places bone fragments in a chamber containing
liquid nitrogen to make them more fragile so they can be pulverized
into fine powder. The more a bone is pulverized, the more likely it
becomes to extract DNA.
It is the latest effort in the largest forensic investigation in
U.S. history, involving a medical examiner's team of 10 scientists
working on remains once thought too degraded from jet fuel, heat and
other conditions to undergo testing.
"We're going back to the same remains that we've tried five, 10, 15
times," Mark Desire, who heads the Medical Examiner's crime lab,
said in the briefing last week.
"We are making DNA profiles from remains we had no hopes of
identifying in the past," he added.
Wolf, who was not among those who opposed the Freshkills Park
project, was gratified by the renewed effort.
"It warms my heart that possibly there will be remains found for
people who still want them," he said.
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“I’ve gone through a lot of trauma with nothing to grieve over,”
Wolf said, choking up in a telephone interview. “I remember watching
Nancy Reagan touch her husband’s casket. I miss not having that.”
(Reporting by Gabriella Borter and Barbara Goldberg; Editing by Bill
Berkrot)
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