The Day

N.Y. medical examiner oversaw office on 9/11

- By MICHAEL BALSAMO

New York — Dr. Charles Hirsch, who oversaw the city medical examiner’s office for more than two decades and whose staff helped identify the remains of Sept. 11 victims, has died. He was 79.

Hirsch, who led the medical examiner’s office from 1989 until his retirement in 2013, died Friday, Mayor Bill de Blasio said. The cause of his death was not released.

Hirsch rushed to the World Trade Center on Sept. 11, 2001, and was hit by falling debris as one of the twin towers collapsed. He and several aides worked to create a temporary morgue at the lower Manhattan site. He oversaw the medical examiner’s office as pathologis­ts worked for years to identify the remains of the more than 2,000 victims.

De Blasio, a Democrat, said that after Sept. 11 Hirsch and his team “worked tirelessly, beginning the city’s now decades-long effort to identify the victims.”

“The Office of the Chief Medical Examiner conducts a solemn and essential role after so many of our city’s tragedies, and we are indebted to Dr. Hirsch for his decades of service at the helm of this agency,” de Blasio said in a statement.

Hirsch’s successor, Dr. Barbara Sampson, said he was “a steady presence and guide during some of the darkest hours.”

“He will be remembered for his exquisite blend of profession­alism and compassion, while his legacy lives in the generation­s of medical examiners, including myself, that he trained in New York City,” she said.

De Blasio also credits Hirsch with turning the medical examiner’s office into “a national leader in forensic pathology.”

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