Synopses & Reviews
In
Who They Were, Dr. Robert C. Shaler, the man who directed the largest and most groundbreaking forensic DNA investigation in U.S. history, tells with poignant clarity and refreshing honesty the story behind the relentless effort to identify the 2,749 victims of the attacks on the World Trade Center.
No part of the investigation into the 9/11 attacks has taken as long or been less discussed than the daunting task of identifying the victims and the hijackers from the remains in the rubble of Ground Zero. In Who They Were, Dr. Robert C. Shaler, former director of the Forensic Biology Department at the New York City Office of the Chief Medical Examiner, tells the inside story of the relentless process of DNA identification and depicts the victories and frustrations that he and his team of scientists experienced during more than three years of grueling work.
On September 11, 2001, New York City was unprepared for the mass-fatality event that occurred at the World Trade Center. The Office of the Chief Medical Examiner had to completely reconfigure itself to process and identify the nearly 20,000 remains that would eventually come through its doors. Facing an astonishing array of obstacles from political infighting and an overwhelming bureaucracy to the nearly insurmountable task of corralling personnel and supplies to handle the work Shaler and his team quickly established an unprecedented network of cooperation among public agencies and private labs doing cutting-edge research.
More than a story of innovative science at the frontiers of human knowledge, Who They Were also tells the very human story of how Dr. Shaler and his staff forged important and lasting bondswith the families of those who were lost. He shares the agony of mistakes made in the chaos and unintended misidentifications resulting in the excruciating difficulty of having to retrieve remains from families of the lost.
Finally, Dr. Shaler shares how he and the dedicated team of scientists who gave up more than three years of their lives when the rest of the world had moved on had to face the limits of science in dealing with the appalling level of destruction at Ground Zero and concede that no more victims would be sent home to their families. As of April 2005, when the process was suspended, only 1,592 out of the 2,749 who died on that fateful day had been identified.
With compelling prose and insight, Who They Were reveals the previously untold stories of the scientists determined to bring closure to devastated families in the wake of America's largest disaster.
Review
"Shaler's account should interest other forensic investigators, [but] its more technical moments will be comprehensible only to those with training in genetics." Kirkus Reviews
About the Author
Robert C. Shaler was the director of the Forensic Biology Department of the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner of New York City from 1990 until his retirement in 2005.
Table of Contents
Contents Preface
Part I Chaos and Uncertainty
1 September 11, 2001
2 Why Me?
3 Gearing Up
4 A Strategy Emerges
5 All Those Bones
6 Phase I: DNA Testing
7 The Most Critical of Tools
8 The Summit Meeting
9 An Alternate Test
10 A Remarkable Woman
11 The Kinship Panel
12 The "Big Mini"
13 An Alternative Arrives on the Scene
14 Their Lives Mattered
15 An Important Role for Metadata
16 American Airlines Flight 587
17 Emphasis
Part II More Than Science
18 2002: A New Year
19 Frustrations
20 A Corner Turned
21 Running Out of Identifications
22 The End -- But Not Finished
23 A Policy Change and a Funeral
24 The First Anniversary
25 2003: The First Six Months
26 Finally...SNPs
27 Quality Assurance
28 Out of the Box
Part III Winding Down and Moving On
29 Identifications: The Third Year
30 The Terrorists
31 Now It's Our Turn
32 When It's My Turn
33 Statistics
Epilogue: DNA Made the Identification
Photo Section
Cast of Characters
Glossary
Acknowledgments
Index