July 12, 2002 7:23 PM EST
By: Sara Kugler
Associated Press
NEW YORK (AP) - The man who has led the monumental effort to put
names to the remains of the World Trade Center dead has come to the
sad realization that the task could end with just 2,000 victims identified.
Of the 2,823 people believed killed in the terrorist attack, 1,229 victims
fewer than half have been identified, 519 by DNA alone.
Dr. Robert Shaler, the city medical examiner's chief of forensic biology,
said in an interview that the medical examiner's office will exhaust all
available forensic technology in an undertaking expected to last until
the end of the year. But if the final number is 2,000, he said,
"I think we'll have done a pretty good job."
"If we get that high," Shaler said, hesitating, "I don't think I'll feel really,
really glad. But I'll feel like we've done the best we can do."
Experts have said some victims probably were vaporized by the intense
fires and the crushing weight of concrete and would never be identified.
City officials have hesitated to venture any estimates for fear that victims'
families might interpret any number as the point where the work will stop.
For Shaler, who says he is "obsessed" with identifying the dead, the only
endpoint is when all available DNA technology has been tapped.
The medical examiner's office has become the last wisp of hope for families
whose loved ones were not recovered in the trade center ruins.
The recovery effort ended last month at ground zero, and on Monday the
last bit of rubble will be sifted at a Staten Island landfill.
For the past 10 months, the medical examiner's office has been conducting
the biggest forensic investigation in U.S. history.
Shaler manages about two dozen staffers who work full-time on trade center
identifications at the facility along Manhattan's East River. Some staffers work
in laboratories extracting DNA from human remains; others analyze DNA
profiles on computers.
Families regularly visit, affecting the dynamic in the laboratory as well as the
scientists themselves.
"Being in this profession and being involved in a laboratory isolates you from
the real world, and I think you get hardened. You steel yourself against the
emotional aspects of it," Shaler said. "That barrier has been broken down,
and I'm much more emotional now."
Technicians sometimes weep at their computers. Shaler himself meets regularly
with families at the office. They tour the place, usually peppering him with questions.
"He's been very direct, and up front," said Terry Strada, who regularly calls
Shaler to see whether any progress has been made in finding her husband, Thomas.
"He doesn't give you any false hope, but at the same time he says,
'If he's here, we'll find him.'"
Shaler said that getting close to the relatives is painful. "What it does, though,
is it instills in you an obsession to help them," he said.
"And I think that's what drives me now."
Human DNA is made up of billions of base pairs, represented by the letters
A - C - G and T. Forensic scientists generally work with DNA samples of
about 400 base pairs.
Genetic laboratories around the country process the samples found at the
trade center site along with DNA taken from family members, and the results
eventually come back to the medical examiner's office to be matched.
Generally it takes about six weeks for one sample to go through the process
of extraction, profiling and matching.
But about half of the nearly 20,000 body parts recovered did not initially yield
enough usable DNA, mostly because the samples were so damaged by moisture,
bacteria and the fires that raged in the ruins for months.
The medical examiner's office is working with Dallas-based Orchid GeneScreen
to adapt a test that would examine pieces of DNA shorter than 100 base pairs.
"I feel an obligation to these families to do whatever we can do," Shaler said.
"I haven't in my own mind exhausted everything that can be done."