Three September 11 victims' remains identified by new genetic techniques after nearly 24 years
New York City officials announced on Thursday, local time, that they had identified remains of Ryan Fitzgerald, a 26-year-old currency trader; Barbara Keating, a 72-year-old retired nonprofit executive; and another woman whose name authorities kept private at her family's request.
The three were already among the thousands of people long known to have died in the Al Qaeda hijacked-plane attacks of September 11, 2001, and long listed among the names on the national memorial in New York City.
But these families, like many others, never previously knew of any remains of their loved ones.
In all, nearly 3,000 people were killed when the hijackers crashed jetliners into the World Trade Center's twin towers, the Pentagon and a field in south-west Pennsylvania.
More than 2,700 of the victims perished in the fiery collapse of the twin towers, and about 40 per cent of those victims have not had any remains identified.
The new identifications were made through now-improved DNA testing of minute remains found more than 20 years ago amid the wreckage, the city medical examiner's office said.
"Each new identification testifies to the promise of science and sustained outreach to families despite the passage of time," chief medical examiner Dr Jason Graham said in a statement.
Ms Keating's son, Paul Keating, told media outlets he was amazed and impressed by the enduring endeavour.
"It's just an amazing feat, gesture," he told the New York Post.
He said genetic material from part of his mother's hairbrush was matched to DNA samples from relatives.
A bit of his mother's ATM card was the only other trace of her ever recovered from the debris, he said.
Barbara Keating was a passenger on the Los Angeles-bound American Airlines Flight 11 when hijackers slammed it into the World Trade Center.
She was headed home to Palm Springs, California, after spending the summer on Cape Cod, Massachusetts.
Ms Keating had spent her career in social services, including a time as executive director of the Big Brothers Big Sisters of South Middlesex, near Boston.
In retirement, she was involved in her Roman Catholic church in Palm Springs.
Mr Fitzgerald, who lived in Manhattan, was working at a financial firm at the World Trade Center, studying for a master's degree in business and talking about a long-term future with his girlfriend, according to obituaries published at the time.
The New York medical examiner's office has steadily added to the roster of 9/11 victims with identified remains, most recently last year.
The agency has tested and retested tens of thousands of fragments as techniques advanced over the years and created new prospects for reading genetic code diminished by fire, sunlight, bacteria and more.
It said it would continue to retest in the future.
"We hope the families receiving answers from the Office of Chief Medical Examiner can take solace in the city's tireless dedication to this mission," New York Mayor Eric Adams said in a statement.
AP
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"The price to pay for making bad decisions on the parks is pretty high." In July, Mr Trump signed an executive order called Making America Beautiful Again by Improving Our National Parks, calling on the NPS to charge foreign visitors an increased entrance fee. According to the order, the price hikes will only occur in parks that already charge admission, which is only about 100 of the 433 park units across the country. "The increased fee revenue from foreign tourists will raise hundreds of millions for conservation projects that improve our national parks," the White House wrote. Mr Francis said the fees wouldn't be enough to compensate for cuts to staffing and budget, though he wasn't opposed to the idea as long as it didn't turn off visitors. "Parks are for everyone," he said. The parks "preserve the full spectrum of our national identity", says NPS. ( Reuters: Kaylee Greenlee ) A National Park Service ranger conducts a walking tour in the Everglades National Park in Florida. ( AFP: Joe Raedle ) Visitors ride horses near the Teton Range of the Rocky Mountains in Grand Teton National Park. ( Reuters: Kaylee Greenlee ) Yellowstone is most famous for its scorching-hot geysers. ( Reuters: Kaylee Greenlee ) Those with green breath can't look away Ms Brengel said that current staffing levels could not be maintained. "We can get away with it for this summer, but people will start to notice by next summer," she said. And while many would turn and run from such a problem, those with "green breath" can't look away. Protests have broken out across the country, while advocacy groups and rangers alike — dubbed Park Protectors —say Congress needs to "step in to reject these ideas of both understaffing and underfunding the parks". On August 23, Park Protectors across the country will take part in a nationwide one-day event organised by the NPCA, which they say will be a "national moment to show love for our parks and demand accountability for the devastating impacts threatening them". Demonstrations broke out across the country. ( Reuters: Yuri Avila ) "Something nature has taught me resonates in this moment: creatures together accomplish what lone ones can't," said Mr Wild.