The Guardian (USA)

Hawaii fire survivors urged to submit DNA to help identify victims

- Gloria Oladipo and agency

Hawaii’s governor, Josh Green, has warned residents to prepare for “a lot more loss of life”, as officials ask for DNA submission­s and fingerprin­ts from survivors to help identify relatives who were killed by the Maui wildfires, as huge numbers are still missing.

Green urged Hawaiians to brace for a higher death toll from the destructio­n on the second largest island in the Hawaiian chain, as police still work to find those unaccounte­d for.

“We do expect to see a lot more loss of life,” Green said during an interview with KITV, an ABC affiliate, late on Tuesday.

“It’s going to be tragic. I want to brace everyone for that,” he said.

At least 115 people are currently officially known to have died as a result of the Maui wildfires, but about 1,100 people are still unaccounte­d for.

The police chief, John Pelletier, said on Tuesday that his team faced difficulti­es in coming up with a solid list of the missing. In some cases people only provided partial names, and in other cases names might be duplicated. There was “no secrecy, no hiding things”, he added.

“We want to get a verified list. The 1,100 names right now, we know that there’s a margin of that, that some of them have first names only and there’s no contact number. So there was a, ‘John’s missing,’ and when we try to call back who said that, no one is answering,” he said. “And so we’re trying to scrub this to make it as accurate as we can.”

Officials announced that every structure damaged by the fire will be searched for remains as part of Hawaii’s larger recovery efforts.

All single-story homes have been searched, authoritie­s confirmed. Officials will now move on to searching multi-level properties and commercial buildings, authoritie­s said in a Monday update.

But authoritie­s are facing a challenge of attempting to confirm the statuses of people who are unaccounte­d for, including how many people perished and how many made it to safety but have not checked in.

Search-and-rescue authoritie­s have asked residents to give their fingerprin­ts and DNA to identify relatives.

As of Wednesday, only 104 DNA samples had been submitted by families.

Maui’s prosecutin­g attorney, Andrew Martin, said that the number of family members coming in to provide DNA samples was “a lot lower” than in other major disasters around the coun

try, though it was not immediatel­y clear why.

“That’s our concern, that’s why I’m here today, that’s why I’m asking for this help,” he said.

Pelletier also urged people to provide DNA and file a police report with as much informatio­n as possible if they have relatives unaccounte­d for.

“If you feel you’ve got a family member that’s unaccounte­d for, give the DNA,” he said. “Do the report. Let’s figure this out. A name with no callback doesn’t help anybody.”

 ?? Photograph: Kevin Lamarque/Reuters ?? Governor Josh Green embraces his wife Jaime Green at Lahaina Civic Center, Maui. The governor warned residents to ‘brace for’ higher casualty figures.
Photograph: Kevin Lamarque/Reuters Governor Josh Green embraces his wife Jaime Green at Lahaina Civic Center, Maui. The governor warned residents to ‘brace for’ higher casualty figures.

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