No hope: Families confront fate of Florida collapse victims
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[July 08, 2021]
By Brad Brooks
SURFSIDE, Florida (Reuters) - It was the
dreaded end that all had feared.
Fourteen days after a seaside condominium tower collapsed just north of
Miami, rescuers said their mission was no longer one of rescue, but had
shifted to recovery. There were no survivors.
"My sister and my brother-in-law were - are - in that building right
now," said Martin Langesfeld, speaking at an impromptu memorial late
Wednesday night a few hundred yards from the rubble, as the reality of
vanquished hope set in.
Langesfeld, 23, said he still could not put his emotions into words. He
looked bewildered that he would be there, standing before a pile of
rubble, talking about his newly married sister, Nicole, buried
underneath. How could this be?
"I want to truly say thank you," Langesfeld said, looking into the eyes
of the search and rescue team members standing a few feet away, whom he
commended for putting their "blood, heart and souls" into trying to find
his sister alive.
"We didn't get the outcome we wanted," he continued. "But we did become
a family."
For Langesfeld and so many other family members of the victims,
Wednesday was a brutal day of trying to come to terms with their loved
one's unfathomable fate. There would be no miracle survivors pulled from
the rubble of the Champlain Towers South, which collapsed on June 24,
burying scores of people.
So far, authorities say they have recovered 54 bodies. Another 86 people
remain missing and feared dead. There is no immediate explanation for
the building's collapse, though investigations are focusing on a 2018
engineering report that warned of structural deficiencies.
The building fell so forcefully that rescuers could find no "voids" or
pockets where people might survive for days - as has happened in some
other cases around the world, where structures were felled by
earthquakes or hurricanes.
Fire officials said on Wednesday that one section on the north side of
the collapsed building saw four floors - normally representing at least
40 feet of vertical space - pancake into just three feet, crushing
everyone and everything in between.
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Members of the search and rescue team stand during a moment of
silence in front of the rubble of the collapsed Champlain Towers
South building in Surfside, Florida, U.S. July 7, 2021, in this
still image taken from drone footage obtained from social media.
Mandatory credit MIAMI-DADE FIRE RESCUE/via REUTERS
Not once has a rescue dog sounded an alert that a
survivor was under the massive heap of concrete and rebar. Not once,
fire department officials said on Wednesday, has their sensitive
equipment detected any sign of life.
It fell on Ray Jadallah, the assistant chief of Miami-Dade Fire
Rescue, to explain to families during a Wednesday afternoon meeting
that there was no longer any realistic hope of locating survivors.
As Jadallah spoke to families, he emphasized that the greatest care
would be taken by those working on the site to gently find all human
remains. He said his team's mission was to reunite everyone with
their family members under the rubble so they could find some peace
and closure.
"I reassured them that just because we transitioned to a search and
recovery, doesn't necessarily mean that the trucks leave, that
everyone leaves and everyone forgets the families," he said.
All search and rescue operators who were working the site left the
rubble Wednesday night and gathered together for a moment of
silence. Those gathered looked exhausted. Few shed tears or betrayed
any emotion. They stared resolutely at the pile of concrete and
twisted rebar before them, appearing ready to get back to work.
Surfside Mayor Charles Burkett said the shift of the operation to
one of recovery was "a body blow" to all involved.
Still, in his grief, he could not but help but betray the tiniest
flicker of hope.
"Nobody knows for sure, with absolute certainty, that there's not
still somebody waiting to get out of that pile," he said, looking in
the direction of the rubble. "I think everybody here believes that,
too."
(Reporting by Brad Brooks in Surfside, Florida. Editing by Gerry
Doyle)
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