New York Post

Clipping proves 9/11 cancer case

- By TINA MOORE Additional reporting by Desheania Andrews tmoore@nypost.com

An old newspaper clipping from across the country helped a cancer patient prove he was at the World Trade Center on 9/11 — and receive a six-figure award decades later.

Spencer Cullum told The Post that he remembers being a terrified 9-year-old and covered in dust while with his family on vacation in downtown Manhattan when the Twin Towers collapsed after being struck by planes.

“There was one middle-aged man who had a handkerchi­ef he was breathing through, and he ripped it in half and gave one half to me and my brother,” he said.

He said he had no way of knowing that the dust clouding the air would be blamed for the leukemia that ravaged his body nearly two decades later — or that he would struggle to prove he was at the scene to get government benefits.

But Cullum was saved in part by an old article in his hometown paper in which his father griped that his son was kicked off a junior football team because it took the family so long to get home to the West Coast after Sept. 11, 2001.

Witness to history

On the day of the attacks, Cullum, his parents, his 12-year-old sister and his 10-year-old brother were downtown waiting to take the ferry to the Statue of Liberty when the first jet, hijacked by terrorists, struck the north tower.

Onlookers, including the family, weren’t sure what had happened, so they moved in closer to take a look, Cullum recalled. Then they saw the second hijacked plane hit the south tower.

“We suddenly heard this really loud noise, it flew right over our heads,” Cullum said. “Even though it was 50, 60 stories up, it was so loud that I thought it was scraping the ground, like that’s how loud the engines were.”

At that point, everyone started back into Battery Park, trying to figure out what was going on.

“My brother and I were watching. We could see human figures jump from the buildings,” he said. “We were asking about them. My mom kept trying to keep us from looking.”

When the towers fell, the family joined others inside a downtown business for refuge. That’s where the man offered him a piece of cloth through which to breathe.

“We were completely covered in gray, like stage makeup or something,” Cullum recalled.

The family made it back to their Times Square hotel on a city bus later that day. They had plane tickets, but the airports were shut down amid the emergency.

So the family rented a car and drove to Canada, where they had relatives and could hunker down until a flight back to the West Coast was available, Cullum said.

They stayed up north for several days, he said, “until everything started to go back to normal and we could fly home again.”

While Cullum was gone, he missed his football team’s two first games and was automatica­lly disqualifi­ed for the rest of the season, a fact his father angrily shared with the local paper at the time — not realizing how important the story would become to his son in the future.

Fast-forward nearly two decades to 2019, when Cullum had just finished grad school at St. John’s College in Santa Fe, NM, and started a junior-high-school teaching job.

That’s when he became gravely ill and was diagnosed with leukemia. The illness put him in the ICU at Vanderbilt University Medical Center in Nashville, Tenn., for six weeks.

“I had hundreds and thousands of dollars in medical debt,” he recalled.

Cullum applied to the Sept. 11

Victim Compensati­on Fund, but he was denied.

The program wanted him to have nonrelativ­es vouch that he was in lower Manhattan on Sept. 11. But he had only family with him at the time.

That’s when the newspaper story about his father venting about the team became crucial.

“No one could have predicted, you know, 20 years later, that we were going to need that proof to corroborat­e the story,” said Cullum’s lawyer, Beth Jablon.

The fund issued Cullum a sixfigure

award March 28, according to Jablon.

The lawyer has since amended Cullum’s original claim to get him money to cover the wages he could have made if he had been able to work right out of college.

Collum declined to reveal the exact award amount but said that so far, it has been enough money to buy property and build a house where he lives with his wife in Santa Fe.

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 ?? ?? COMFORT: This newspaper clip, printed shortly after the Twin Towers terrorist attacks on 9/11, helped Brian Cullum (top) prove that he was in lower Manhattan that day and paved the way for him to receive muchneeded aid from the Sept. 11 Victim Compensati­on Fund.
COMFORT: This newspaper clip, printed shortly after the Twin Towers terrorist attacks on 9/11, helped Brian Cullum (top) prove that he was in lower Manhattan that day and paved the way for him to receive muchneeded aid from the Sept. 11 Victim Compensati­on Fund.

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