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More 911 Calls September 11th

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  • More 911 Calls September 11th

    NEVER FORGET!

    NEW YORK (AP) - The calls, some only seconds in duration, evoked
    the firefighters' unrelenting answer of the call to duty - and for
    343 of them, to their death in the ruins of the World Trade Center.
    In their own voices, heard for the first time, members of the
    FDNY offered glimpses into the horror and heroism of Sept. 11 on
    emergency call recordings released Wednesday. From a battalion
    chief in the trade center lobby, to a lieutenant heading into the
    raging fire from the 35th floor while surrounded by burned office
    workers, to a Bronx firefighter waiting for approval before heading
    to ground zero, the tapes offered a new perspective on that
    September morning.
    All three of those firefighters were killed.
    "Numerous burn injuries are coming down. I'm trying to send
    them down. ... We're still heading up," said Capt. Patrick Brown,
    moments before he was killed.
    He was one of 19 dead firefighters whose voices were captured on
    the 1,613 previously undisclosed emergency calls that followed the
    worst terrorist attack ever on U.S. soil. The calls were released
    after The New York Times and relatives of Sept. 11 victims sued to
    get them.
    The taped conversations released Wednesday demonstrated the
    firefighters' unhesitating bravery amid the chaos and the carnage.
    Within minutes of the first plane hitting at 8:46 a.m.,
    firefighters - some off-duty, some even retired - began calling
    dispatchers to volunteer their help. Lt. Timothy Higgins of
    Brooklyn's Squad 252 called at 8:52 a.m.
    "We're available for the trade center," he volunteered.
    "OK, thanks," replied the dispatcher. Higgins, with five other
    members of his squad, made the trip from Brooklyn to Manhattan. All
    six died.
    In the Bronx, Lt. Michael Healey called a dispatcher to make his
    pitch for an assignment in lower Manhattan just before the second
    plane hit.
    "This is Mike Healey over in Squad 41," he said. "I was just
    seeing if he could maybe possibly get us over there, so, just keep
    us in mind, over into Manhattan."
    "OK," the dispatcher said. They responded, with Healey and
    five other squad members killed.
    Devlin, in the lobby of the south tower, provided a glimpse of
    the problems downstairs. Thirty-five floors above, fire Capt.
    Patrick Brown reported a chaotic scene of civilians - some of them
    burned - heading down the stairwell as the firefighters headed into
    the fire.
    "Apparently it's above the 75th floor," Brown said in the
    24-second exchange barely an hour before the north tower fell. "I
    don't know if they got there yet. We're still heading up."
    The same mix of concern and confusion was evident in other more
    frantic calls.
    "One of the towers just collapsed," said an unidentified fire
    lieutenant. "Everybody's got to be inside of it. ... There's got
    to be thousands of the people inside it. One of the towers just
    came down on top of EVERYBODY."
    One off-duty worker was in tears when she called in to try to
    report for duty.
    "All those people - what about the EMTs and paramedics and
    firefighters in there helping people get out?" she asked her
    supervisor.
    "I don't know, sweetie, I really don't know."
    "Oh God."
    Family members, in a familiar tableau, again complained their
    loved ones were betrayed by poor communication that could have
    steered them outside before the buildings collapsed.
    "We're still looking for information for how we can fix what
    went wrong that day," said Aggie McCaffrey, whose firefighter
    brother Orio Palmer was killed when the first tower collapsed.
    Barbara Hetzel lost her son Thomas, of Ladder Co. 13. Although
    she has listened to such tapes before, she said, it doesn't get
    easier with time.
    "It's even deeper and sadder," said Hetzel, who listened with
    less than a dozen family members in a midtown Manhattan high-rise.
    In March, the city released transcripts of 130 calls from people
    trapped in the towers, including only the voices of operators and
    other public employees. The callers' voices were cut out after city
    attorneys argued that their pleas for help were too emotional and
    intense to be publicized without their families' consent.
    Thousands of pages of emergency workers' oral histories and
    radio transmissions were released last August. Fire Commissioner
    Nicholas Scoppetta ordered his department to search for additional
    recordings when another tape turned up shortly after the March
    release.
    The New York Times and family members sued for access to the
    emergency calls and firefighters' oral histories. Attorneys said
    they wanted to find out what happened in the towers after two
    hijacked jetliners crashed into them and what dispatchers told
    workers and rescuers.
    One of the more poignant calls involved a 911 operator and
    Melissa Doi, a manager for IQ Financial Systems. Doi, stranded on
    the south tower's 83rd floor with five other people, stayed on the
    line for more than 20 minutes.
    The 32-year-old Doi died in the trade center. A portion of Doi's
    end of the conversation was played for jurors in April at the trial
    of Sept. 11 conspirator Zacarias Moussaoui, but this was the first
    time the operator's voice was heard.
    The call ended with the operator hoping for the best when the
    other end of the line went silent.
    "Not dead, not dead," she said. "Not dead, they're snoring."
    ---
    Associated Press Writers Amy Westfeldt, Verena Dobnik, Deepti
    Hajela, Anita Chang, Meghan Barr, Tom Hays, Christie Hampton and
    Sara Kugler contributed to this report.

    (Copyright 2006 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)

    NEVER FORGET!

    Excerpts from latest batch of Sept. 11 emergency calls

    By The Associated Press
    New York City released 1,613 emergency phone calls made after
    the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attack on the World Trade Center.
    Some excerpts:
    ---
    "We're in a state of confusion. We have no cell phone service
    anywhere because of the disaster. ... Bring all the additional
    handy talkies." - Battalion Chief Dennis Devlin, who died in the
    attack
    ---
    "One of the towers just collapsed. Everybody's got to be inside
    of it. ... There's got to be thousands of people inside it. One of
    the towers just came down on top of EVERYBODY." - Unidentified
    fire lieutenant
    ---
    A conversation between an off-duty dispatcher and her
    supervisor:
    Supervisor: "Why are you crying, Carol?"
    Dispatcher: "The World Trade Center collapsed."
    Supervisor: "Everything is collapsed, baby."
    Dispatcher: "All those people - what about the EMTs (emergency
    medical technicians) and paramedics and firefighters in there
    helping people get out?"
    Supervisor: "I don't know, sweetie, I really don't know."
    ---
    "Keep praying. They'll be in there soon. It takes a while to
    get up those stairs ... It's going to be fine. It's going to be
    fine." - Dispatcher to 9/11 victim Melissa Doi, who died on the
    83rd floor of the south tower
    ---
    "Well, a plane just crashed into it this morning, the other one
    the same thing. OK? Why don't you just try to stay calm, try to
    stay together. I'm going to try to get this to the radio people to
    get somebody up to you." - Unidentified dispatcher to person in
    the trade center
    ---
    "We have six men here. Do you want us to find our way down
    there? ... OK, we're going to try and respond down to the trade
    center." - Fire Lt. Raymond Murphy, who died after volunteering
    his services
    ---
    "Sir, did you find something and put it over your head? OK, did
    you see any fire at this time? Sir ... OK, I want you to go on the
    floor. Kneel on the floor. On the floor. Cover your head with a
    cloth." - Unidentified dispatcher
    ---
    "We got people jumping out of buildings. It is unreal. It is
    absolutely unreal." - Unidentified emergency worker
    ---
    "Ma'am, if you have to break a window, if you have to. If you
    don't, don't break it. I'm gonna get somebody there to get you, OK?
    ... I'm not going to be able to call you back, we're very busy
    right now. Everybody's calling me." - Unidentified dispatcher
    ---
    "I'm on the 35th floor. ... Numerous burn injuries are coming
    down. I'm trying to send them down. ... We're still heading up." -
    Fire Capt. Patrick Brown, later killed in the trade center
    ---
    "There's heavy smoke and flames, and the building management is
    announcing that everything is all right, and it's not and they're
    confused." - emergency operator, relaying call from the 82nd floor
    of the south tower to another dispatcher
    ---
    "Is there any towels in the area? Anything that you have handy.
    Soak them with water. Lie on the floor. OK? Sir, try to calm
    yourself down." - Unidentified emergency operator

    (Copyright 2006 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)
    Proudly serving as the IACOJ Minister of Information & Propoganda!
    Be Safe! Lookouts-Awareness-Communications-Escape Routes-Safety Zones

    *Gathering Crust Since 1968*
    On the web at www.section2wildfire.com

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