Construction workers near the World Trade Center discovered 74 more bone
fragments on a damaged skyscraper being prepared for demolition, the largest
discovery of human remains since cleanup of the building began last fall,
officials said.
The Deutsche Bank building,
center right, shrouded in black netting with a large American flag, is
across from the World Trade Center site in New York in this May 30, 2002
file photo. [AP] |
Investigators reviewing emergency calls from the morning of the terrorist
attacks also identified eight more recordings of emergency dispatches and 911
calls from the towers that had previously been overlooked.
Most of the bone fragments discovered over the weekend were found mixed with
gravel that had been raked to the sides of the roof of the former Deutsche Bank
building, which suffered extensive damage when the twin towers collapsed on
Sept. 11, 2001.
Ellen Borakove, spokeswoman for the city medical examiner, said workers still
had more than 100 yards of material to rake through and said she wouldn't be
surprised by the discovery of additional remains.
"What they've cleared on the weekend was just a very small area. They still
have quite a lot to go," Borakove said Thursday.
The building is contaminated with asbestos, lead and trade center dust and is
being cleaned before workers begin deconstructing it floor by floor in June.
Earlier this year, workers in the building found four additional human body
parts, and they found 10 additional bone fragments on the roof last fall. In the
most recent discovery, workers retrieved 82 samples, 74 of which proved to be
human remains that will undergo DNA testing, Borakove said.
Some Sept. 11 family members have urged the Lower Manhattan Development Corp.
rebuilding agency to have forensic experts search the building first, and many
planned to ask Mayor Michael Bloomberg on Thursday to require a team from the
medical examiner's office to be on the site at all times.
"This is an abomination that we are putting this on construction workers,"
said Sally Regenhard, the mother of a firefighter killed at the trade center.
The medical examiner's office has more than 9,000 unidentified remains from
the 2,749 victims of the trade center attack. The remains are being are being
stored in the hope that more sophisticated DNA technology will allow for
identifications in the future. The remains of more than 40 percent of the people
killed at the trade center have not been identified.
The newly discovered 911 recordings were identified on two previously
overlooked tapes as investigators searched for the voice of a fire department
official who died in the trade center.
The fire department said the recordings would be released after they are
processed by the city law department. Roughly 130 calls were released Friday
after the voices of the callers had been edited out. The voices of the fire and
police operators who heard the calls for help were released after The New York
Times and victims' relatives sued.