Albuquerque Journal

Blood vials allow for funeral of 9/11 fire chief

New find puts an end to delay of 15 years

- BY FRANK ELTMAN ASSOCIATED PRESS

ST. JAMES, N.Y. — Thousands of firefighte­rs in their dress blues stood at attention and saluted Friday as a flag-draped casket passed carrying two tiny vials of blood, the only known remains of a comrade who died in the Sept. 11 attacks.

For 15 years, the family of Battalion Chief Lawrence Stack was unable to put him to rest with a Roman Catholic funeral Mass because no trace of his body was ever found in the rubble of the World Trade Center. But the way was finally cleared when they recently discovered the blood, which the 58-year-old Stack had donated as part of a bone marrow drive for a child with cancer before the attacks.

“He gives blood for a young cancer kid — that’s just Larry,” said Rich Brandt, a chief with the Long Beach, Calif., Fire Department, who began his career as a member of the Fire Department of New York and learned under Stack when Stack was a captain in a Manhattan fire house. Brandt showed off a bracelet with Stack’s name on it that he said he has worn since 2001.

“He was kind of a dad to me,” Brandt said.

Stack’s own two sons — both New York City firefighte­rs — stood watch on the back of a ceremonial firetruck bearing the flag-draped casket with the vials of blood as it passed by firefighte­rs and dignitarie­s standing at attention. The New York City Emerald Society Pipe Band led the procession, playing “Amazing Grace” as the casket was led into Saints Philip and James Roman Catholic Church, in St. James on eastern Long Island.

Lt. Michael Stack said during the funeral service that his father, who was a safety expert with the department, had been working in his office preparing a report on the deaths of three firefighte­rs killed exactly 15 years ago Friday — June 17, 2001. When he learned that planes had flown into the World Trade Center, Stack raced to the scene and began helping people flee the burning towers. He was last seen assisting a man who had injured his leg when the south tower collapsed with him on the ground below.

Brandt said his friend could always be counted on to help others.

“Not only did he help people that day, but his entire career and his entire life was about helping people,” Brandt said.

Theresa Stack, marking what would have been her 49th wedding anniversar­y Friday to the fallen firefighte­r, told reporters last week that she had never given up hope that his remains would be found.

 ?? FRANK ELTMAN/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The flag-draped casket of New York Fire Department Battalion Chief Lawrence Stack is carried Friday from his funeral in St. James, N.Y.
FRANK ELTMAN/ASSOCIATED PRESS The flag-draped casket of New York Fire Department Battalion Chief Lawrence Stack is carried Friday from his funeral in St. James, N.Y.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States