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21,000 Bone Fragments Later, 9/11 Families Still Without Closure

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First Posted: 09/07/11 09:31 AM ET Updated: 11/07/11 05:12 AM ET

By Cristian Salazar, Associated Press

NEW YORK -- His family has his spare firefighter uniform, but not the one he wore on 9/11-- or any other trace of him.

Killed at the World Trade Center, 32-year-old Scott Kopytko's remains were never recovered-- a painful legacy of grief for families looking for answers, closure or final confirmation that their loved one was actually a 9/11 victim.

"Very painful and very hurt" is how Russell Mercer, Kopytko's stepfather, describes it. "And mistrusting of everybody."

Numbers tell the story in the decade of search and recovery of the remains of Sept. 11 victims – a massive forensic investigation marked by a Supreme Court appeal of families who wanted a more thorough search, and discoveries years after the attacks of even more remains in manholes and on rooftops around ground zero.

_ Tens of millions have been spent, including on the painstaking extraction of DNA from tiny bone fragments, using technology refined from a decade ago.

_ Of 21,000 remains that have been recovered, nearly 9,000 are unidentified, because of the degraded condition they were found in. More than 1,100 victims have no identifiable remains.

_ And the pace of the process is telling – in five years, only 26 new identifications. Ernest James, a 40-year-old man who worked in the trade center's north tower, was the last identification, in late August.

"I can't give a time frame of when an identification is going to be made, if at all," said Mark Desire, who heads the World Trade Center identification unit for the city medical examiner's office. "But we are working nonstop."

Five scientists work seven days a week trying to make new identifications at a lab in an ultra-modern building on the east side of Manhattan. The unidentified remains are stored in climate-controlled conditions under a white tent blocks from the medical examiner's office. About 400 bone fragments are looked at and analyzed every month.

DNA analysis is done by comparing the remains' genetic profile to DNA found from victims' possessions, like toothbrushes; from relatives; or from previously identified remains.

The fragments are examined, cleaned, and pulverized into powder to extract tell-tale genetic traces – a process that can take up to a week before an identification is made. Most of the DNA profiles generated belong to previously identified victims.

When an identification is made, the remains are returned to the family. Sometimes, nothing survives the DNA testing. Relatives might only receive the packaging where the remains had been stored.

Desire, assistant director of forensic biology for the medical examiner's office, says the office won't give up.

"The dedication of this team ... is as strong as it was 10 years ago," he said in a recent interview.

But the extended search baffles family members like Mercer.

"You can find DNA from the Civil War, World War I and World War II," he said. "But you can't find DNA from first responders or civilians?"

The struggle to identify the 9/11 dead began almost immediately after the attacks in New York City, the Pentagon, and in Shanksville, Pa., where one of the hijacked planes crashed in the woods and plains before reaching its intended target. Forensic teams at the three sites were faced with challenges in identifying victims and the hijackers – some of whose remains are now in the custody of the FBI.

In Pennsylvania, the heat caused by the high-speed crash into a field caused 92 percent of the human remains to vaporize, leaving very little to work with, said Wallace Miller, the county corner who helped to identify the victims. DNA was used to make matches to the 40 victims, plus four sets of remains from the terrorists. To this day, remains are still embedded in the field where the flight went down.

Most of the 184 victims at the Pentagon also were identified using DNA. All but five – where there was not enough material to analyze – were identified, said Paul Stone, spokesman for the U.S. Armed Forces Medical Examiner System.

But nowhere was the forensic detective work as demanding and daunting than at the 16-acre World Trade Center site, where the giant towers collapsed onto the rest of the complex, breaking everything into pieces.

Few full bodies were recovered at all. Then, heat, moisture, bacteria and chemicals like jet fuel combined to thwart the detective work of forensic scientists. Some remains were so badly burned or contaminated that DNA could not be analyzed.

By April 2005, the city's chief medical examiner, Charles Hirsch, told families his office would be suspending identification efforts because it had "exhausted the limits of current DNA technology."

Identifications restarted in 2006 amid the discovery of dozens of bone fragments of a 9/11 victim in a manhole renewed a search that found nearly 2,000 new fragments on rooftops and under a trade center road. The latest search ended last year.

Body parts were also recovered at a former landfill in Staten Island, where debris from the site was transferred. In 2008, a judge rejected a lawsuit brought by several families of Sept. 11 victims who sought to move the debris to a plot of land that could be transformed into a cemetery.

What to do with the remains that have been recovered also has stirred up anguish for some families.

As an above-ground memorial to the victims nears opening, some renewed objections to a plan to store the unidentified remains behind a subterranean wall at the National September 11 Memorial & Museum. The museum is to open next year.

"It's horrendous ... that families have to rub shoulders with thousands to go see the remains," said Rosemary Cain, who lost her 35-year-old firefighter son, George, on 9/11.

Some of his remains have been returned to her, but she said it was important for the unidentified to have a proper burial place.

"They are precious, sacred remains of our loved ones," she said.

The memorial foundation and several other family members have said they agreed to the arrangement years ago. There will also be a private room adjacent to the repository set aside for families.

Monica Iken said it would be a place where she could go to mourn her husband, Michael, who died in the trade center's south tower; she has no remains.

"I can go to honor him where he took his last step, his last breath," she said.

The failure to identify so many victims has affected the final victims' count over the years The city's list of the dead – often with multiple missing persons' reports of the same people – peaked at nearly 7,000 in the months after the attacks, but dropped to 2,752 by the fall of 2002.

Three more names were removed in 2004 after investigators failed to track them to the trade center; including Sneha Anne Philip, a Manhattan doctor who was last seen Sept. 10, 2001, at a department store across from the twin towers. Her name was added back to the death toll in 2008 after her family argued in court that there was no other place she could have been.

And the mystery of who died in the trade center hasn't yet been solved by science.

Twenty-seven profiles DNA generated so far don't match any of the approximately 17,000 genetic reference materials that were collected. Scientists aren't sure who they are.

"It's an open investigation," said Desire. "There may be some victims where there are no bone fragments. And they are never going to be identified."

___

Associated Press writer Kevin Begos contributed to this report from Shanksville, Pa.

____

Follow Cristian Salazar at twitter.com/crsalazarAP.

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By Cristian Salazar, Associated Press NEW YORK -- His family has his spare firefighter uniform, but not the one he wore on 9/11-- or any other trace of him. Killed at the World Trade Center, 32...
By Cristian Salazar, Associated Press NEW YORK -- His family has his spare firefighter uniform, but not the one he wore on 9/11-- or any other trace of him. Killed at the World Trade Center, 32...
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maxfax
Taa - dah!
08:44 PM on 09/11/2011
"Twenty-seven profiles DNA generated so far don't match any of the approximately 17,000 genetic reference materials that were collected. Scientists aren't sure who they are." Yet, because as DNA profiling advances, there will be more I.D.s.
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Maximo Ugmo
Opinionated Snark, with sentiment open to doubt...
02:35 PM on 09/10/2011
Closure is the buzzword for people that don't accept reality...Patent Pending.
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Djay0252
American First, Second, and ALWAYS
09:18 PM on 09/07/2011
There will be no closure for these families...at least not what they are looking for. 750,000 families from WW2 share that pain.
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Jaybird248
05:38 PM on 09/07/2011
Fodder-wing:

You really are concerned about the WWII Germans?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
AliceEatPeyote
03:58 PM on 09/07/2011
"families looking for answes, closur or final confirmation that their loved one was actually a 9/11 victim"
are they implying its possible he fakied his death?
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lhanderson86
04:17 PM on 09/07/2011
No, but many people when they lose a loved one and have no body, hold out hope, no matter how irrational, that they might be alive somewhere, unidentified in a coma or with amnesia... anything to keep the hope alive.
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horhay
Res ipsa loquitur
07:54 PM on 09/07/2011
That's very true, & sometimes the impossible does happen.

Just imagine what Jaycee Dugard's mother was thinking all those years. Then, after nearly 20 years of not knowing what happened to her, getting a phone call that she was indeed alive(with children even).

But 9/11 is more like the devastation in Hiroshima, when the U.S. dropped an atom bomb on that city, then a kidnapping or abduction. People were actually vaporized or their shadows were burned onto walls by the nuclear detonation and flash point of the atom bomb that destroyed Hiroshima, which is how the term ground zero came into being in the first place. When the WTC collapsed with immense crushing weight, all the fires and intense heat must have burned everything into ash. Many of those missing were in effect cremated along with all the other rubble.

Still, though, one of the missing could be in a coma or an amnesiac, like you said. Or maybe those fires burned extremely hot and extensively for reasons we'll never really know.
03:56 PM on 09/07/2011
I truly wish and hope all the family of victims find the closure they need.
maxfax
Taa - dah!
08:45 PM on 09/11/2011
They may not, but they may find a new normal they can live with.
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Dredd
Our government is a wartocracy.
03:41 PM on 09/07/2011
Two hundred pieces of human remains found spread all about, which forensic DNA testing determined belonged to the same person.

What is up with that?

"... mistrusting of everybody ..." says Russell Mercer in this post.

Sounds like a proper perspective.

http://blogdredd.blogspot.com/2011/09/september-countdown-5.html
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
KIVPossum
Moldova Marsupial
03:41 PM on 09/07/2011
Tragic for the families, but what do they want? No one is going to have an open casket funeral for their lost loved ones.

I think the US has done well trying to identify what could be found. Possibly gone beyond what was required.
maxfax
Taa - dah!
08:52 PM on 09/11/2011
You're right it is tragic for the families, beyond that I don't agree with anytrhing else you've said.
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horhay
Res ipsa loquitur
03:39 PM on 09/07/2011
"New York -- As of 10/11/01, a reported 258,710 tons, or nearly 16,000 truckloads, of debris had been hauled away from the World Trade Center site to the Fresh Kills Landfill, Staten Island, N.Y."

While there was an obvious urgency to clear the area of debris and to find any survivors or their remains, this also compromised the crime scene by hauling the rubble away. Maybe there really wasn't any other way to go about it, it was a very chaotic atmosphere, there was still such an unbearable shock that this horror had happened. The smoldering ruins just kept emanating fumes and dust while what looked like an open pit to hell was being excavated. In the end it was just too devastating and massive for a continued search and rescue operation since the demolition and cleanup became the priority. But it always seemed very hasty & unorganized, like something was being swept under the rug(literally). No wonder why one of the unidentified firefighter's family members mistrusts everybody about it.
03:23 PM on 09/07/2011
It makes you wonder if there was just one survivor who took the opportunity to disappear and start a new life.
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lhanderson86
04:30 PM on 09/07/2011
I would hope, if any of them did, that they had no family to leave behind. Nothing could be crueler than letting your loved ones think you are dead when you're not.
uhavenoface
eat my shorts
03:23 PM on 09/07/2011
here's your closure:

they're dead. move on.
03:52 PM on 09/07/2011
Easy said but never done. Not everybody moves on the same way as you do.
uhavenoface
eat my shorts
03:58 PM on 09/07/2011
sorry but if bone fragments make you feel any better then you are frankly pretty twisted. either change your name to emily grierson or seek professional help.
maxfax
Taa - dah!
08:53 PM on 09/11/2011
Impossible, but nice sentiment.
uhavenoface
eat my shorts
10:43 AM on 09/12/2011
if you can't move on, then do the rest of us a favor and enroll for a summer at camp killyourself.
03:19 PM on 09/07/2011
Some of the families express their doubts in the video below.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hZEvA8BCoBw&feature=player_embedded
03:57 PM on 09/07/2011
I've had my doubts for many years, its great to see experts give their opinion. Thanks for the video.
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ANuttyReader
03:18 PM on 09/07/2011
On my way to work I watched both airplanes hit the twin towers, from my office window I saw both towers come down, from my apartment building I saw the WTC burn from days. It was horrible..

Back in the 80's I lost my Grandma in an earthquake, a month later, we buried someone, not sure if it was her or another of the victims in the building, giving the circumstances and the heroism of the rescuers that worked so hard but it came to a point that it was impossible to continue the search, we were grateful to them, we had to move on. We have her memories and that is really what matters, we know she understands.

My point is that some times, you cannot bury people, you cannot identify them, it's just impossible, but you cannot live hanging on to that, and I am sure that your lost loved one would not want you to do that, they would want you to live your life in a way that honored their memory and not hang to the morbid part of it.
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Robyn Singleton
screw you guys, Im going home
03:05 PM on 09/07/2011
what a waste of government spending.. I think these people are waiting for their loved ones to come back..they are holding on to hope that they are not dead. sorry for your loss, but you are wasting too much money to get DNA from tiny bone fragments..
03:50 PM on 09/07/2011
I wouldn't mind my tax money going to this cause. I didn't lose anybody that day but if I did I probably wouldn't able to move on because the matter they died. Although I wouldn't mind if I never found the remains of my love one because they would always be in my heart but everybody is different, they need this, its the least the government could do for them.
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jl4141
Unless I'm wrong, I'm never wrong.
02:38 PM on 09/07/2011
This is going to be a hard week for a lot of people.
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lhanderson86
02:43 PM on 09/07/2011
I have to fly to New Mexico this Saturday. All this news coverage is freaking me out!
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jl4141
Unless I'm wrong, I'm never wrong.
02:50 PM on 09/07/2011
I was referring to the stirring up of painful memories. Take a Valium before you fly and you'll be fine.