-
Aug 16, 2006 10:56 am US/Eastern
-
Digg |
Facebook |
E-mail
|
Print
NYC Releases More Sept. 11 Calls
List Includes 10 Unreleased 911 Messages From World Trade Center
NEW YORK (AP) ―
The city is releasing more than 1,600 previously undisclosed Sept. 11 emergency calls - several by rescuers who later were killed - after fire department officials said they discovered hundreds of internal dispatches of firefighters who went to rescue people from the burning World Trade Center.
The 1,613 calls being made public Wednesday also include 10 previously unreleased 911 calls made by people trapped in the twin towers, although those calls will include only the voices of the operators who heard their pleas.
Some of the released audio files may include content which is graphic and disturbing to some listeners.911 Emergency Calls Released Aug. 15, 2006
Released Audio - Recording 1
Released Audio - Recording 2
Released Audio - Recording 3
Released Audio - Recording 4
Released Audio - Recording 5
Released Audio - Recording 6
Released Audio - Recording 7
Released Audio - Recording 8
Released Audio - Recording 9
Released Audio - Recording 10
Released Audio - Recording 11
Released Audio - Recording 12
Released Audio - Recording 13
Released Audio - Recording 14
Released Audio - Recording 15
Released Audio - Recording 16
Released Audio - Recording 17
Released Audio - Recording 18
Released Audio - Recording 19
Released Audio - Recording 20
Released Audio - Recording 21
Released Audio - Recording 22
Released Audio - Recording 23
Released Audio - Recording 24
Released Audio - Recording 25
Released Audio - Recording 26
Released Audio - Recording 27
Released Audio - Recording 28
Released Audio - Recording 29
Released Audio - Recording 30
Released Audio - Recording 31
Released Audio - Recording 32
Released Audio - Recording 33
Released Audio - Recording 34
Released Audio - Recording 35
Released Audio - Recording 36
Released Audio - Recording 37
Released Audio - Recording 38
Released Audio - Recording 39
Released Audio - Recording 40
Released Audio - Recording 41
Released Audio - Recording 42
Released Audio - Recording 43
Released Audio - Recording 44
Released Audio - Recording 45
Released Audio - Recording 46
Released Audio - Recording 47
Released Audio - Recording 48
Released Audio - Recording 49
Released Audio - Recording 50
Released Audio - Recording 51
Released Audio - Recording 52
Released Audio - Recording 53
Released Audio - Recording 54
Released Audio - Recording 55
Released Audio - Recording 56
Released Audio - Recording 57
Released Audio - Recording 58
Released Audio - Recording 59
Released Audio - Recording 60
Released Audio - Recording 61
Released Audio - Recording 62
Released Audio - Recording 63
Released Audio - Recording 64
Released Audio - Recording 65
Released Audio - Recording 66
Released Audio - Recording 67
Released Audio - Recording 68
Released Audio - Recording 69
Released Audio - Recording 70
Released Audio - Recording 71
Released Audio - Recording 72
Released Audio - Recording 73
Released Audio - Recording 74
Released Audio - Recording 75
Released Audio - Recording 76
Released Audio - Recording 77
Released Audio - Recording 78
Released Audio - Recording 79
Released Audio - Recording 80
Released Audio - Recording 81
Released Audio - Recording 82
Released Audio - Recording 83
Released Audio - Recording 84City officials are under court order to provide all emergency calls made from and around the World Trade Center on Sept. 11, 2001. The New York Times and families of Sept. 11 victims had sued the city for access to firefighters' oral histories and emergency calls.
The transcripts of about 130 911 calls from people trapped in the towers were released earlier this year, including only the voices of the operators, emergency responders 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 all undisclosed recordings when another tape turned up shortly after the 911 calls were turned over in March. City officials listened to all calls to emergency and fire dispatchers between 8:45 a.m. and 10:45 a.m. on Sept. 11 -- from when hijacked jetliners slammed into the towers to when the towers collapsed -- to find the new recordings.
The fire department said Tuesday evening that when it first turned over its emergency calls, officials "misinterpreted instructions they were given on what kinds of calls to copy" and "failed to capture" other 911 calls they knew had to be made public.
"The department regrets the delay," it said in a statement.
Attorney Norman Siegel, who represents Sept. 11 families, called on Mayor Michael Bloomberg to pledge that no more emergency recordings from that day exist.
"We need the mayor to assure the family members that this is it, that this is everything we have," Siegel said. "If it was 10 or 20 tapes, one could understand that they overlooked some. But if you're talking hundreds, and possibly as many as 2,000 tapes, the serious substantial question is how did this happen?"
A spokesman for the mayor declined to comment Tuesday.
The Fire Department of New York said most firefighters' calls are questions about where to report for duty. Nineteen firefighters and two emergency medical technicians who died are identified by name on the new tapes, and their families have been notified, the department said. Because they are public employees, their entire recordings will be released on Wednesday.
The city withheld three 911 calls in March to be used during the sentencing phase of Sept. 11 conspirator Zacarias Moussaoui's trial a month later. Jurors in the Moussaoui case heard excerpts of calls made by Melissa Doi, who spent more than 20 minutes on the phone with a 911 operator from the 83rd floor of the south tower, and Kevin Cosgrove. Both were killed in the attack.
"I'm going to die, aren't I?" Doi asked the dispatcher. "Please God, it's so hot. I'm burning up."
(© 2006 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.)