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A photo of Scott Michael Johnson at the National September 11 Memorial & Museum in New York.
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Honor and memory: Identifying remains of 9/11 victims won’t cease

Jin Lee/National September 11 Memorial & Museum via AP

Honor and memory: Identifying remains of 9/11 victims won’t cease

For some of those working in the New York City medical examiner’s office, the events of 9/​11 are relived constantly. It cannot be otherwise when their task, nearly 17 years after the attacks on the World Trade Center, is to put names to unidentified remains.

Their expertise in forensics is coupled with the patience of Job. Days, weeks, months, a year or more may go by without a breakthrough, and then ... they’re suddenly able to tell a family that remains of a loved one have been found. 

Last week, the city announced the identification of Scott Michael Johnson, 26, a securities analyst who worked on the 89th floor of the south tower, the second of the two towers hit by hijacked planes. 

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It was the first such announcement in nearly a year, made possibly by advances in DNA technology, the intellectual fortitude of forensic scientists and the city’s commitment to a promise made by its former chief medical examiner, the late Charles Hirsch, never to give up. The current chief medical examiner, Barbara Sampson, told The New York Times it’s a “sacred obligation.”

Mr. Johnson was the 1,642nd person to be identified out of the 2,753 killed at Ground Zero. The medical examiner’s office has pored through 22,000 remains to make the identifications it has so far. The remains are kept in a 2,500-square-foot repository — located “between the two footprints of the Twin Towers,” the medical examiner’s office says — at the 9/​11 Memorial & Museum. Family members may visit a private reflection room there.

Scientists are way past the point of identifying victims through fingerprints and dental records. Now, according to the Times, they’re working with bone fragments that don’t easily yield DNA clues. The office had made multiple attempts over the years to identify the remains now known to be Mr. Johnson’s, succeeding only when new technology allowed a better DNA extraction process and scientists multiplied the genetic material to create a profile that was matched to his toothbrush and his parents.

New York City’s medical examiner is not the only government agency involved in this kind of work. The Defense POW/​MIA Accounting Agency works to identify soldiers, sailors and airmen lost during combat, including 72,000 still unaccounted for from World War II. 

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Before Mr. Johnson, the New York City medical examiner last identified a 9/​11 victim in August 2017. Before that, the last identification came in 2015.

Dr. Hirsch, who retired in 2013 and died three years later, warned families that progress would come in fits and starts as technology improved. For the families of those unaccounted for, his promise, backed now by Dr. Sampson, remains something to cling to. 

First Published: July 30, 2018, 4:00 a.m.

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A photo of Scott Michael Johnson at the National September 11 Memorial & Museum in New York.  (Jin Lee/National September 11 Memorial & Museum via AP)
Jin Lee/National September 11 Memorial & Museum via AP
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