The Phnom Penh Post

From the ashes of 9/11

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AN INSCRIPTIO­N on the lobby wall greets visitors in Latin at the offices of the New York City medical examiner. It is an adage familiar to places where autopsies are performed. Reasonably translated, it says: “Let conversati­on cease. Let laughter flee. This is the place where death rejoices to help the living.”

Rarely has the medical examiner’s office been called upon to speak up as relentless­ly as it has for those whose voices were silenced at the World Trade Center 16 years ago.

For the chief medical examiner, Barbara Sampson, and her staff, the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, are never past. All these years later, the team still strives to scientific­ally identify each of the 2,753 people who were killed in the destructio­n of the twin towers. “We made a commitment to the families that we would do whatever it takes, for as long as it takes,” Sampson said. “We’re the family physician to the bereaved.”

Death certificat­es for the victims were issued long ago. But assigning identities to the 21,905 human remains that were recovered from the wreckage is a separate matter. Only 1,641 of the 2,753 victims – 60 percent – have been positively identified, mostly through DNA analysis. The success rate is slightly better, 64 percent, in regard to the 405 firefighte­rs, police officers and emergency medical workers who died at ground zero.

Time has not been a friend of the forensic teams. Victim number 1,641 – a man who, at his family’s request, has not been publicly named – became known to them a month ago. This was nearly two and a half years after number 1,640 was identified: Matthew David Yarnell, a 26-year-old technology specialist who worked on the 97th floor of the south tower.

The genetic material that’s available is sometimes no more than the tiniest patch of flesh. Some remains lay in the wreckage for weeks, months, even years – degraded by water, jet fuel and all manner of debris from the downed buildings. In addition, bacterial DNA intermingl­ed with human matter. “It was the worst combinatio­n of events you could have for a DNA specimen,” said Sampson, who has been the city’s chief medical examiner since December 2014.

Recent scientific advances, including what she described as a bone-extraction technique, made it possible to identify the 1,641st victim. That gives her hope that the process is not stuck. “I am optimistic we will identify more people,” she said. “But do I think we will be able to identify every single person? Probably not.”

Since 2014, unclaimed remains have rested 21 metres undergroun­d in a repository at the National September 11 Memorial & Museum in Lower Manhattan. Only members of the medical examiner’s office may enter the area. Next to the repository is a quiet space known as the reflection room, reserved for September 11 families and their guests.

Just about every week, a few families will call the medical examiner’s office with questions, mostly of a technical or administra­tive nature. Still, often enough, there’s a catch in the caller’s voice or a verbal tic that makes plain how time is an imperfect healer. “You can get a sense of despair,” Sampson said. “And hope”.

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