Tapes of frenzied Sept. 11 rescue effort released
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Determining it was a terrorist attack
“Another plane,” says a 911 operator. “This is a whole new thing going on. ... They’re saying it was a terrorist attack.”
The operators offer various advice to callers: open a window, stay where you are, use soaking wet towels to keep out the smoke. In some cases, they are simply stymied by what they hear.
“I’ve got a guy on the 106th floor and he wants to know how to deal with a hundred people,” a fire operator says. “He wants some directions. I don’t know.”
One operator tells a caller at 9:02 a.m., one minute before the second plane hit: “If you feel like your life is in danger, do what you must do, OK? ... I can’t give you any more advice than that.”
Several relatives of the victims gathered at a law office to listen to the recordings. They read the transcripts mostly in silence, occasionally whispering to each other.
Al Santora, a retired deputy fire chief whose firefighter son died in the attack, said he was amazed at the professionalism and calmness of some of the dispatchers. But he was also surprised at how little information they seemed to have, and at how little constructive advice they offered.
“It’s just incredible to read this. It’s an hour in and this is the first time I’ve heard someone give advice on what to do about smoke,” he said.
Police Commissioner Ray Kelly issued a statement praising the city’s 911 operators for their “professionalism and compassion under the most trying of circumstances.”
One victim identified
An order to release the names of 28 callers who identified themselves is under appeal, however one of those tapes, involving trade center victim Christopher Hanley, was made public Thursday after his parents released their audiotape to the Times.
Hanley was in the 106th floor and called at 8:50 a.m. — four minutes after the first plane struck.
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A dispatcher tells him: “Just sit tight. Just sit tight. We’re on the way.”
“All right,” Hanley says. “Please hurry.”
Sally Regenhard, who lost her firefighter son and is one of the plaintiffs, said the public should be allowed to hear both sides of the conversation, and that family members should be able to listen to all the voices, in case they recognize their loved ones.
“Only a mother could listen to recordings and maybe hear some glimmer of your child’s voice,” she said, “even though his name may have been garbled.”
Kate Ahlers O’Brien, a spokeswoman for the city Law Department, cited the Court of Appeals ruling that said families’ privacy interests outweighed the public’s right to know.
The first transcripts released as part of the lawsuit came last August, when thousands of pages of oral histories of firefighters and emergency workers, as well as radio transmissions, were released. The Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, which owned the trade center and has its own police force, released all of its emergency recordings in 2003.
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