Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

‘It’s like bin Laden reaching out from the grave’

9/11 still killing FBI agents 17 years later

- By Del Quentin Wilber

WASHINGTON — FBI agent Dave LeValley was driving to work in Manhattan when he saw the first jetliner strike the World Trade Center on a bright September morning 17 years ago. He quickly parked his car and sprinted to the scene, where he scoured for evidence and helped survivors while dodging falling debris and bodies.

When the first tower collapsed, he dove into a bodega, escaping with his life. What he couldn’t outrun: the toxic cloud of dust.

“We saw him a couple of hours later, and he looked like a snowman, covered head to toe in that stuff,” said Gregory Ehrie, a fellow FBI agent who spent several weeks with LeValley digging in the rubble.

LeValley, who joined the FBI in 1996 and rose to lead the bureau’s Atlanta office, was diagnosed in 2008 with chronic lymphocyti­c leukemia. He died in May, age 53, from a different form of cancer that had metastasiz­ed to his brain. FBI officials and health experts say both were likely caused by carcinogen­ic fumes and dust after the 9/11 attacks.

In all, 15 FBI agents have died from cancers linked to toxic exposure during the investigat­ion and cleanup, the FBI says. Three of them, including LeValley, have died since March — a rash of deaths that has reopened traumas of the worst terrorist attacks in U.S. history and sparked fresh anxieties.

“It’s like bin Laden is still reaching out from the grave,” said FBI agent Thomas O’Connor, who is president of the FBI Agents Associatio­n, a service and advocacy group for active and former agents. “It affects us all in serious ways. People are dying, others are sick. Those that are not yet sick wonder: Is that headache, is it really cancer? Is that sore hip really cancer?”

The 15 agents’ deaths, which the FBI says occurred in the performanc­e of their duties, are only a tiny part of a much larger tragedy. More than 7,500 emergency responders, recovery and cleanup workers, and volunteers at the three Sept. 11 crash sites have been diagnosed with various forms of cancer, according to the World Trade Center Health Program, which is administer­ed by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

New York City officials say that more than 300 firefighte­rs and police officers already have succumbed to cancers and other diseases related to the attacks.

Alongside police and firefighte­rs, FBI agents combed the rubble for victims and clues at the crash sites — the World Trade Center, the Pentagon and a field in Shanksvill­e, Pa. Scores of agents also spent 12-hour shifts sorting debris in warehouses and at the Fresh Kills landfill in Staten Island.

Most did not wear appropriat­e safety gear because agencies did not understand the danger in the poisons unleashed by burning jet fuel and other hazardous material, according to O’Connor. More than a dozen current and former agents who responded to the crash sites now have cancer, he added.

O’Connor’s organizati­on has urged agents to sign up for the federal health program, which provides medical monitoring and treatment to more than 71,000 former responders and 16,000 other survivors. He began to weep as he described watching his wife, Jean — also an FBI agent, who had rushed to the crash site at the Pentagon — open an envelope containing her test results.

She got good news — she was just fine. “You have no idea the stress this causes,” O’Connor said, “every day.”

FBI Director Christophe­r Wray has eulogized the three agents who died this year and said the deaths have profoundly affected him and his agency.

“It breaks my heart even more to see more victims, which is what they are, they’re victims of the 9/11 attacks in a different way,” Wray said in a statement.

The FBI and the agents’ associatio­n are working with the Department of Labor to declare the deaths and illnesses of agents who responded to Sept. 11 a result of performanc­e of their duties. That designatio­n would make the victims’ families eligible for more federal benefits than the FBI provides by itself.

The Labor Department has so far determined that five FBI agents’ deaths were caused by their exposure to Sept. 11 toxins, according to the agents’ group. The FBI and the agents’ associatio­n are seeking the same designatio­n — and benefits — for the other 10 who died. A Labor Department spokesman declined comment on specific cases, citing agency guidelines.

Doctors and experts caution that more research is needed to draw conclusive links between specific diseases and exposure to Sept. 11 sites.

Several studies, including two published this year in the Journal of the American Medical Associatio­n, have concluded that emergency teams and other rescue workers at the World Trade Center faced an increased risk of cancer.

FBI agent Scott McDonough breathed in 9/11 toxins for weeks. A member of an FBI helicopter crew, he was dispatched to New York and spent several weeks leaning out of a helicopter to take close-up photos of debris.

“We flew through the dust,” he said. “It stuck to you. In your nose. In your lungs.”

He went to a doctor in 2016 after he spotted blood in his stool. Within weeks, he was undergoing surgery for rectal cancer, which the federal health program determined was related to his Sept. 11 work. Since then, McDonough said, he has been cancer free. He is encouragin­g his colleagues to get evaluated.

“You have to do this,” he said, “for your family.”

Relatives of fallen agents described grueling medical battles, painful tests and difficult family transition­s for FBI agents dedicated to investigat­ing terrorism suddenly became terrorism’s hidden victims.

Robert Roth was based in Quantico, Va., on Sept. 11 and drove straight to the Pentagon when he heard the news. He spent days setting up search teams and gathering evidence, said his wife, Tresa Roth.

While jogging with his children in 2006, Roth felt pain in his left hip, his wife said. Tests revealed the father of five was suffering from a serious form of multiple myeloma.

He died 18 months later.

 ?? SHAWN BALDWIN/AP 2001 ?? More than 7,500 first responders at the three 9/11 sites were diagnosed with cancer.
SHAWN BALDWIN/AP 2001 More than 7,500 first responders at the three 9/11 sites were diagnosed with cancer.

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