The Signal

Keeping the fight alive

Retired N.Y. cop, Castaic resident never yielded in fight against crime; health issues from 9/11 attacks now have him fighting for his life

- By Jim Holt Signal Senior Staff Writer

Aformer NYPD cop who moved to Castaic with celebrity status for seldom being put down by the many bad guys he confronted, is readying for the fight of his life as the effects of exposure to 9/11’s aftermath threaten to put him down.

Marc Manfro — whose son Steven remains one of the SCV’s alltime-great prep football players or Valencia — goes under the knife Monday at the Providence Tarzana Medical Center in a bid to fix a medical condition that stems from his time assigned to Ground Zero after the infamous terrorist attacks.

Manfro suffered an ailment many of his fellow former cops and other first responders have come to know all too well — a respirator­y condition dubbed World Trade Center Cough. He moved to Southern California in a bid to breathe a little easier.

The respirator­y problems, however, led to a strain on his heart. So much so that the resulting cardiac

condition caused him to collapse at least 10 times in the last couple of years.

So, on Monday, surgeons are scheduled to repair Marc Manfro’s heart.

“It’s crazy,” Marc said at his home in Castaic on Friday. “That all this is from the 9-11 terrorists. My health was destroyed.”

It’s a subject Manfro doesn’t like to dwell on when asked. He’d much rather talk about his sons or his celebrated career working for the New York Police Department.

His father was a cop, his son Steven is now a cop.

But few cops can reflect on

the colorful, sometimes controvers­ial career Marc Manfro carved out for himself during his time in New York City.

Celebrated cop

At one point, producers of the TV show “Top Cops” flew him to Toronto for a filming of an episode about his acclaimed police work.

When he tells his stories of his arrests as a “NYPD’s Top Cop” it isn’t just talk. His home office walls are paneled with proof of his endeavors — at least 60 framed awards, framed citations, frame letters of commendati­on and, of course, newspaper headlines, including one internatio­nal story reprinted in Chinese.

The headline of that particular story: “He took on 50 armed gang members and arrested 22 thugs at one time.”

When he tells the stories now, however, his breathing is labored. Sometimes he holds the back of his office chair for support in getting the story out.

World Trade Center Cough was formally recognized by physicians studying the effects of pollutants released in the collapse of the World Trade Center buildings and explained in the medical journal, The Lancet.

WTC Cough

In a special supplement titled: “World Trade Center Cough” published in The Lancet on Dec. 1, 2002, physicians concluded: “We felt it was critically important to characteri­se the particle exposure environmen­t with respect to the chemical nature and health impact of particles that existed immediatel­y after the collapse, and to examine the continuing air quality concerns around the World Trade Center.”

Manfro was officially diagnosed with reactive airways dysfunctio­n syndrome, which is defined as the sudden onset of asthma following a high level of exposure to a corrosive gas, vapor or fume.

In the same Lancet supplement, it was reported that the U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency collected samples of particulat­e matter around Ground Zero, including many measuremen­ts of ambient asbestos.

Like many NYPD cops at the time, Manfro was assigned to stand guard at Ground Zero about twice a month.

“I got a headache at the end of every shift,” he said, recalling the experience Friday. “Then I started getting a shortness of breath.”

Ground Zero

“At Ground Zero, you would be walking through six inches of ash — of wood, plastic, all kinds of chemicals,” he said.

Whenever he completed his shift at Ground Zero, he said, he would put all his clothes in a garbage bag to disinfect the clothing.

“I didn’t want them (family members) contaminat­ed,” he said.

Those same family members are now turning their attention and empathy to the big tough cop who always looked out for them, hoping for a positive outcome from Monday’s surgery.

 ?? Dan Watson/The Signal (See additional photos on signalscv.com) ?? Former NYPD Police Officer Marc Manfro talks about his days on the force at his Castaic home on Friday.
Dan Watson/The Signal (See additional photos on signalscv.com) Former NYPD Police Officer Marc Manfro talks about his days on the force at his Castaic home on Friday.

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