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Casualties of the September 11 attacks

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Victims of terror attacks in the US

September 11 attacks

TheSeptember 11 attacks were the deadliestterrorist attacks in human history, causing the deaths of 2,996 people, including19 hijackers who committedmurder–suicide and2,977 victims. Thousands[a] more were injured,[3][4] and long-term health effects have arisen as a consequence of the attacks. New York City took the brunt of the death toll when theTwin Towers of theWorld Trade Center complex inLower Manhattan were attacked, with an estimated 1,700 victims from theNorth Tower and around a thousand from theSouth Tower. 200 mi (320 km) southwest inArlington County, Virginia, another 125 were killed inthe Pentagon.[5][6][7] The remaining 265 fatalities included the 92 passengers and crew ofAmerican Airlines Flight 11, the 65 aboardUnited Airlines Flight 175, the 64 aboardAmerican Airlines Flight 77 and the 44 aboardUnited Airlines Flight 93. The attack on the World Trade Center's North Tower alone[b] made the September 11 attacks the deadliest act of terrorism in human history.[9]

Most of those who perished werecivilians, except for: 344 members of theNew York City Fire Department andNew York Fire Patrol; 71 law enforcement officers who died in the World Trade Center and on the ground in New York City;[10] 55 military personnel who died at the Pentagon in Arlington County, Virginia;[11] aU.S. Fish and Wildlife Service officer who died when Flight 93 crashed into a field nearShanksville, Pennsylvania;[12] and the 19terrorists who died on board the four aircraft. At least 102 countries lost citizens in the attacks.[13][14][15]

Initially, a total of 2,603 victims were confirmed to have been killed at the World Trade Center site.[16] In 2007, theNew York City medical examiner's office began to add people who died of illnesses caused by exposure to dust from the site to the official death toll. The first such victim was a woman who died in February 2002.[17] In September 2009, the office added a man who died in October 2008,[18] and in 2011, a man who had died in December 2010,[19] raising the number of victims from the World Trade Center site to 2,606,[4] and the overall 9/11 death toll to 2,996.

As of August 2013[update], medical authorities concluded that 1,140 people who worked, lived, or studied in Lower Manhattan at the time of the attacks have been diagnosed with cancer as a result of "exposure to toxins atGround Zero".[20] In September 2014, it was reported that over 1,400 rescue workers who responded to the scene in the days and months after the attacks had since died.[21] At least 10 pregnancies were lost as a result of 9/11.[22] Neither theFBI nor the New York City government officially recorded the casualties of the 9/11 attacks in their crime statistics for 2001, with the FBI stating in a disclaimer that "the number of deaths is so great that combining it with the traditional crime statistics will have anoutlier effect that falselyskews all types of measurements in the program's analyses."[23][24]

Evacuation

See also:Communication during the September 11 attacks

Most tall buildings in the United States at the time were not designed for complete evacuation during a crisis, even after the1993 World Trade Center bombing. It was also procedural for announcements in the case ofhigh-rise fire safety for individuals to remain in their offices unless they were near the burning floor.[25] However, after it took ten hours to completely evacuate the towers in the 1993 attack, multiple additions were made to the buildings and evacuation plans. Radio repeaters were installed in the towers to improve communication, battery powered emergency lights were installed, and fire drills held. Individuals who evacuated for both the 1993 and 2001 attacks reportedly stated they were better prepared for the 2001 evacuations.[26] At least two individuals who had evacuated in both 1993 and 2001 later reported that they had prepared for a potential evacuation after 1993, by bringing either an item such as a flashlight or anemergency preparedness bag with them.[27]

Both 110-story towers housed three stairwells in the central cores of each. On maintenance floors containing lift and ventilation machinery (such as some of the floors where Flight 175 struck the South Tower), the northern and southern stairwells entered corridors extending north and south to stairwells that bypassed the heavy equipment. The three stairwells―labeled A, B, and C―were as tall as the buildings, with two built to 44 inches (110 cm) in width and the third being 56 inches (140 cm) wide. In the North Tower, the stairs were approximately 70 feet (21 m) apart, compared to the distance of 200 feet (61 m) between the stairwells in the South Tower.[28]

Ground zero and surrounding area as seen from directly above depicting where the two planes impacted the towers
A map showing the attacks on theWorld Trade Center; the planes are not drawn to scale

In the immediate aftermath of the attacks, media reports suggested that tens of thousands might have been killed. Estimates of the number of people present in the Twin Towers that morning range between 14,000 and 19,000. TheNational Institute of Standards and Technology determined that approximately 17,400 civilians were in theWorld Trade Center complex at the time of the attacks.[29] Turnstile counts from thePort Authority indicate that the number of people typically in the Twin Towers by 10:30 am was 14,154.[30]

Almost all of the deaths in the Twin Towers occurred on floors trapped by the plane impacts, but it is unknown how many people were in those floors when the towers were struck. The available data suggests that between 1,344[31] and 1,426[32] people occupied floors 92–110 of the North Tower whenAmerican Airlines Flight 11 crashed into the skyscraper at 08:46, none of whom survived. Somewhere in the region of 599[33] to 690[32] people were present on floors 77–110 of the South Tower when it was hit byUnited Airlines Flight 175 at 09:03, with only 18 survivors.

In interviews with 271 survivors, researchers in 2008 found that only about 8.6% had fled as soon as the alarm was raised while about 91.4% stayed behind to wait for more information or carrying out at least one additional task (collecting belongings/calling a family member). The interviews also showed that 82% of those who were evacuating stopped at least once during their way down, due to congestion on the stairs, to take a rest, or due to environmental conditions (smoke/debris/fire/water).[34] Another hindrance to the evacuation of theWorld Trade Center was that as the planes struck, the force of the impact caused the buildings to shift enough to jam doors in their frames and stairwells to become blocked by brokenwall boards,[35] trapping dozens of people throughout the buildings, mostly on the floors closer to the impact zones. Communication breakdowns also hampered the evacuation of workers as one survivor recounted calling 911 multiple times from the South Tower only to be put on hold twice, as911 operators had a lack of awareness about what was happening and were overwhelmed with the amount of calls, at times repeating incorrect information. Communication issues were also seen as first responders were utilizing different radio channels to communicate, their frequencies were overwhelmed or they had been off duty and responded without their radios.[26]

North Tower

Within moments of Flight 11's impact, the Port Authority issued acomplete evacuation of the North Tower, an order that only those beneath the 92nd floor were capable of heeding. Nonetheless, the roughly 8,000 people who could descend were left facing a harrowing scenario. Neither tower had been designed to facilitate a mass evacuation, and each of the twins only had three stairwells descending to the ground level. For anyone higher than the 91st floor, escape was impossible, with one victim relaying to 911 after the first plane hit that the stairs were inaccessible for the 106th floor.[36] A computer modeling study done after the attacks, projected that it would take about 1 hour and 27 minutes ± 2 minutes for 8,239 people to evacuate the tower. The modeling also suggested that if Stairwell B had remained intact through the entire building all 1,049 projected survivors could have evacuated with an additional 2 minutes to the total time.[37] At least 77 people were freed on the 88th through 90th floors by a team of Port Authority officers: construction managerFrank De Martini, building inspectorPablo Ortiz, engineer Mak Hanna, environmental coordinator Pete Negron, and Assistant General Manager Carlos S. da Costa.[35] Just minutes after the plane crash, emergency responders arrived at the World Trade Center and began organizing teams to assist in the evacuation of the North Tower.[38]

Two survivors shown covered in dust after the collapse of the towers

Many people began to evacuate via the stairs on their own, while others chose to wait for instructions from thePort Authority of New York and New Jersey. Others who chose to evacuate were also pushed into action by loved ones who had been able to contact them.[36] As evacuees descended the staircases in the North Tower, they were directed to descend to the concourse level beneath the World Trade Center complex, where the mall was located. Others who managed to escape credit the "Survivors Staircase," an outdoor staircase that survived the disaster, and World Trade Center workers who knew escape routes. One survivor stated, "Between the 11th floor and the 9th floor, we wound through this maze. When we got to the plaza level we were walking through and there was one emergency light on. There was water up to our calves. All of a sudden there was a voice. We saw someone in a miner hat. He opened the door and said 'Just keep going'."[39]

South Tower

Meanwhile, in the South Tower, almost all of its roughly 8,600 occupants knew immediately that something serious just happened in the building next door. The sound of the crashing airliner was heard by well over 4,000 people. Some who had glimpsed Flight 11 just before it impacted the North Tower thought it was lined up to strike their building, and the fireballs from the crash immediately thereafter were witnessed by countless employees on sides facing the North Tower. The blast shattered windows on the South Tower's 95th floor,[40] while the tower's northern and western façades were battered by debris.[41] As the top of the South Tower became enveloped by the thick smoke pouring southeast, many people witnessed desperate office workers jumping from the tower burning opposite.[42] The disaster in the North Tower was even physically perceived by a number of people in the South Tower. Survivors from the South Tower reported feeling their building shake as the first plane crashed into its twin, and smoke from the North Tower began seeping into the South Tower through ventilation ducts.[43] Those at the same altitude as the fires burning in the North Tower could feel the extreme heat radiating into their floors.[44] Media coverage, phone calls, and word of mouth quickly alerted anyone else to the seriousness of what was happening. Half personally believed their lives were in danger.[45]

Because of what happened to the North Tower, many people in the South Tower chose to evacuate as a precaution. However, the major hindrance to this process was that for the 17 minutes between the impacts of Flight 11 and Flight 175, it had not yet been determined that a terrorist attack was unfolding. The initial assumption by most was that the first crash had merely been an accident,[46] and even those who suspected it was a deliberate attack based on its flying were uncertain. For this reason, the Port Authority in the South Tower did not initiate a full evacuation of the building, instead deciding to spread the word via the South Tower'sintercom system and security guards for workers to stay put and remain in their offices.[47] A deliveryman for the South Tower told reporters he decided to leave following the first crash, and on his way out he heard a voice over the intercom declaring that: "The building is secure. The safest place is inside; stay calm and do not leave." Others who ignored the message were met with officials at the lobby who told them to return to their respective floors.[48] In a radio conversation recorded within three minutes of the first impact, the director of the South Tower told his counterpart in the North Tower that he was not going to order an evacuation until given the all-clear by "the boss from the fire department or somebody".[49] This was done in order to avoid overcrowding on the plaza and concourse levels, which was feared would slow the evacuation and rescue operations in the North Tower.[50]

Despite the announcements, thousands continued to evacuate the South Tower. More than 3,500 people were present on-site between the 77th and 110th floors,[32] including at least 1,100 employees ofAON Insurance (floors 92 and 98–105) and over 700 people working forFiduciary Trust (floors 90 and 94–97).[51] Both companies had offices directly across from the North Tower's impact zone, and executives working for the two firms did not hesitate to order an evacuation of their offices immediately following the first impact, allowing more than 80% of the employees from each company to get to safety before the South Tower was struck.[52] Lower down, the offices ofFuji Bank (floors 79–82), Euro Brokers (floor 84)[53] andCSC (floor 87) were also evacuated,[54] the latter of which avoided suffering any casualties in the South Tower. Executives such as Eric Eisenberg, who personally made the decision to evacuate AON's offices, instructed their employees to take the stairs down to the 78th floor Skylobby, where they could take an express elevator to the ground level and exit the building safely. Within a window of 17 minutes, between 8:46 a.m. and 9:03 a.m., an estimated 2,900 people had gotten below the 77th floor of the South Tower,[55] while between 599 and 690 did not.[33][32]

By 8:57 a.m., officials working for the FDNY and NYPD opined that the ongoing disaster in the North Tower had made the entire WTC complex unsafe and requested that the South Tower be evacuated,[56] advice that took an additional six minutes to be implemented. By 9:02 a.m., an announcement was made gently giving workers in the South Tower the option to leave.[57] Sean Rooney, a victim who worked for AON Risk Management on the 98th floor, was speaking on the phone to his wife seconds before impact, allowing some of the announcement to be heard in the background: "May I have your attention, please. Repeating this message: the situation occurred in Building 1. If conditions warrant on your floor, you may wish to start an orderly evacuation."[25]

Pentagon

An aerial view ofthe Pentagon following the attacks

Sincethe Pentagon was struck after the World Trade Center, many who worked there did not think the attack would extend past New York City. A media relations specialist who was working in the building at the time recounted years later that she told a coworker, "This is the safest place to be in the world right now".[58] Another was on the phone with his wife and hersixth-grade class when the plane struck, stating the whole building felt like it had been completely lifted off the foundations. He hung up after stating, "We've been bombed, I have to go" before immediately starting to evacuate. Uncertainty about the type of attack led to many being cautious in evacuating with at least one security guard warning of potential shooters laying in wait, to gun down evacuees.[59]

World Trade Center Hotel

Main article:Marriott World Trade Center
TheMarriott World Trade Center on May 15, 2001, approximately four months prior to the attacks

World Trade Center 3 was also known as the World Trade Center Hotel, the Vista Hotel, and the Marriott Hotel. During evacuations of the two larger towers, this 22-story hotel was used as an evacuation runway for about 1,000 people who were evacuated from the area.[60] The guests and others who were evacuated through the hotel were guided by hotel staff through the hotel's bar and outside onto Liberty Street.[61] A policeman was stationed holding the door between the Marriott and Liberty Street, and would periodically hold up the line due to concerns about falling debris or bodies.[62] A paramedic helping in the evacuation process remembered the air being so hot and thick that he had trouble breathing and difficulty seeing, but could hear thePASS device alarms of firefighters that had collapsed and needed assistance.[58]

A majority of the registered 940 guests at the hotel began to evacuate after alarms were raised due to a piece of one of the plane'slanding gear landing on the top floor of the pool.[60] Some did not immediately do so, with at least one guest recounting that he woke up to the first plane hitting the North Tower and went back to bed only to be awoken by the impact of the plane hitting the South Tower. He then watched the news and took a shower, got dressed, and gathered his belongings before evacuating after watching the South Tower collapse.[63] The delay was in part to many guests being unable to see the damage done to the North Tower from any vantage point on the grounds of the Marriott.[62]

Surrounding area

Main articles:Rescue and recovery effort after the September 11 attacks andMaritime response following the September 11 attacks
United States Coast Guard patrolling theNew York Harbor with the impact area of World Trade Center in sight, September 11, 2001

After both towers had been struck, the order to evacuate the North Tower quickly spread to encompass not only the entire World Trade Center complex, but most high rise buildings in Lower Manhattan and surrounding areas as well. The evacuation of employees from the North and South towers continued past the plaza and through the concourse. Evacuees from the North Tower were directed through the underground shopping mall, from where they exited the complex ontoChurch Street. Evacuees from the South Tower were directed elsewhere to prevent congestion; they were sent across the covered footbridge over West Street to theWorld Financial Center or to4 World Trade Center and out ontoLiberty Street.[citation needed] Not all of the evacuees were connected to World Trade Centers, with students fromStuyvesant High School, theBorough of Manhattan Community College, tourists, residents of the area with their pets and others, also involved in the evacuation process.[64]

Relieving congestion within the city and clear the evacuees and civilians, boats and ferries were used to further evacuateLower Manhattan.[65] Some of the boats were a part of theCoast Guard, others were civilian, company or state-owned, that acted independently or after seeking the permission of the Coast Guard, who initially instructed vessels to stand by and then issued a request for all available boats to participate.[66] One participating vessel's crew later recounted the call from Lt. Michael Day of the Coast Guard saying; "All available boats... This is the United States Coast Guard... Anyone wanting to help with the evacuation of Lower Manhattan report to Governors Island." In total the water evacuation of lower Manhattan moved about 500,000 during the day.[64]

Disabled individuals

See also:Salty and Roselle

On the day of the attacks, there were a number of disabled individuals in the World Trade Center; there was a revised evacuation plan in place after the 1993 attack as many had been told to wait for rescuers and some waited up to nine hours.[67][68] Some like John Abruzzo, aquadriplegic, and Tina Hansen were able to evacuate, as Abruzzo was carried by coworkers from the 69th floor down in anevacuation chair and indicated that it took them about ninety minutes to reach ground level. The chairs were some of the about 125 that were purchased after the 1993 bombing, however there was varying levels of training and communication about them.[69] Others such as Michael Hingson, who was born blind, were able to evacuate from the 78th floor of the North Tower with the help of hisguide dogRoselle.[70]

Survivors

See also:Collapse of the World Trade Center
World Trade Center site (Ground Zero) with an overlay showing the locations of the original buildings

No one in the North Tower survived in the impact zone, above it, or immediately below it.[71] The highest floor in the building that had any survivors was floor 91. Approximately 15 people in a central stairwell on floor 22 or below survived the collapse of WTC 1, escaping or being rescued from the rubble.[72][73]

At least 42 confirmed (there are more people according to eye-witness who aren't public or mentioned by name) people escaped from at or above the impact zone of the South Tower (floors 77 to 85) after it was struck byUnited Airlines Flight 175 at 9:03 am, the highest coming from floor 98.[74][75] All but four people (Alan Mann, Lauren Smith, Linda Rothemund, and a unnamed woman with Mann)[76][77] escaped from the South Tower impact zone usingstairwell A in the northwest corner, the only stairwell left intact after the impact.[50] Investigators believe that stairwell A remained passable until the South Tower collapsed at 9:59 am. Because of communication difficulties between911 operators andFDNY andNYPD responders, most of them were unaware that stairwell A was passable and instructed survivors above the impact zone to wait for assistance by rescue personnel.[71] The four individuals who didn't use stairwell A survived due to the emergency brakes kicking in when the elevators they were in free-fall.

Despite the relatively few survivors from the impact zone and above, the 9/11 Commission did bring up the possibility of others who may have descended from the point of impact but were unable to make it all the way down before the tower collapsed and killed everybody still within.[78] This was confirmed by the public survivors who mentioned coworkers who survived the Flight 175 impact, but either stayed to help or couldn't escape. Three of impact zone survivors who didn't escape wereWelles Crowther, who saved at least 18 people from the 78th floor.[79][80] andMelissa Doi and Karen Schmidt. Doi was on the phone, calling 911 while trapped with Schmidt and other people on the 83rd floor.[81][82]

Two of the 42 confirmed survivors, Michael Cannon and Shailaja Vyas, weren't born yet as their mothers, Sophia and Jyoti were pregnant with them.[83][84] One survivor, Doris Torres, died on September 16th from her injuries after escaping the 78th floor with her coworker, Donovan Cowan.[85][86] One survivor, Claire, was in front of Sophia Cannon on the 81st floor when flight 175 hit, but never went public with her own story.[83] Another survivor, Rhonda, was another coworker of Cannon and with her on floor 82, but is also private.[83]

South Tower Impact Zone Survivors
NameAgeFloorCompanyRef
1Carl Boudakian3977Baseline Financial Services[87]
2Simon ChenN/A77Baseline Financial Services[88]
3Aurora FajardoN/A77Baseline Financial Services[87]
4Alfredo GuzmanN/A77Baseline Financial Services[88]
5Florence Jones4077Baseline Financial Services[89]
6William MachucaN/A77Baseline Financial Services[87]
7James MagalongN/A77Baseline Financial Services[87]
8Rob RothmanN/A77Baseline Financial Services[87]
9Eric Thompson2677Baseline Financial Services[90]
10Jyoti Vyas3277Baseline Financial Services[91]
11Shailaja Vyas077N/A[84]
12Allan UngerN/A77Baseline Financial Services[87]
13Jonathan WeinbergN/A77Baseline Financial Services[92]
14Donovan Cowan3478Fiduciary Trust[93]
15Keating Crown2378AON[94]
16Mary Jos5478New York State Department of Taxation and Finance[93]
17Alan Mann3578AON[95]
18Edward Nicholls5178AON[93]
19Silvion Ramsunder3178Fuji Bank[93]
20Kelly Reyher4178AON[93]
21Linda RothemundN/A78Keefe, Bruyette, and Wood[77]
22Christine Sasser2978Fuji Bank[93]
23Eugenia "Gigi" Singer4878AON[93][96]
24Lauren Smith3678Keefe, Bruyette, and Wood[77]
25Donna Spera3678AON[93]
26Doris Torres3278Fiduciary Trust[86]
27Judith "Judy" Wein4578AON[93]
28Ling Young4978New York State Department of Taxation and Finance[93]
29Felipe Oyola2481Fuji Bank[97]
30Stanley Praimnath4481Fuji Bank[98]
31ClaireN/A81AON[83]
32Jaede Barg3782AON[99]
33Michael Cannon082N/A[83]
34Sophia Cannon1882AON[100]
35RhondaN/A82AON[83]
36Julie Davis2783Fuji Bank[101]
37Brian Clark5484Eurobrokers[98]
38Ronald DiFrancesco3784Eurobrokers[98]
39Richard Fern3184Eurobrokers[98]
40Judith Francis-Wertenbroch3985AON[102]
41Luisa LizN/A85AON[103][104]
42Kevin DorrianN/A98N/A[75]

After collapses

AGerman Shepherd dog working with the Urban Search and Rescue Task Force, works to find people trapped at the site of the World Trade Center after the attacks.

After the towers collapsed, only 20 individuals in or below the towers escaped from the debris, including 12 firefighters and three Port Authority police officers. Only 16 individuals who were inside the collapsing North Tower survived and were rescued, and they were all trying to evacuate via stairwell B, located in the center of the building. Four people who were in the concourse area between the Twin Towers survived and either saved themselves or were rescued. Only one person who was in the South Tower at the time of its collapse survived. Alfred Joseph[105][106] worked on the 44th floor and was found, eventually dying from a heart attack on January 1, 2002.[107][108] The last survivor removed from the WTC collapse debris,Genelle Guzman-McMillan, was found in the ruins of the North Tower 27 hours after its collapse. She and 15 other workers from the 64th floor evacuated later than most people. She and another coworker, Pasquale Buzzelli,[108] were the only two survivors of this group.[109]

An unknown number of other people survived the initial collapse, but were buried in air pockets deep beneath the rubble and could not be rescued in time.[110][111] Some were able to rescue themselves and others from the rubble by climbing through the rubble[112] or digging and listening for sounds of life in order to safely remove the victims from the rubble.[113]

Survivor advocacy

Main articles:Health effects arising from the September 11 attacks andWorld Trade Center Health Program

As of September 28, 2008, a total of over 33,000 police officers, firefighters, responders, and community members have been treated for injuries and sickness related to the 9/11 attacks inNew York City, including respiratory conditions, mental health problems likePTSD anddepression, gastrointestinal conditions, and at least 4,166 cases ofcancer; according to one advocacy group "more cops have died of illness linked to the attack than had perished in it".[114][115]

External videos
video iconJon Stewart speaks as part of hearing on 9/11 Victim Compensation Fund – GLOBAL NEWS

Daily Show hostJon Stewart and others succeeded in pushing for a law passed by Congress in 2015 that permanently extends health care benefits for the responders and adds five years to the victims' compensation program.[115] Stewart's advocacy on the issue continued into 2019. In June of that year, he testified in front of Congress on behalf of 9/11 first responders who did not have proper health care benefits from theSeptember 11th Victim Compensation Fund. During the testimony he was critical that "Sick and dying, they [first responders] brought themselves down here to speak to no one" and that it was "Shameful" and "...an embarrassment to the country and it is a stain on this institution."[116]

Fatalities

See also:Lists of victims of the September 11 attacks,Memorials and services for the September 11 attacks, andDeaths in September 2001

World Trade Center

The September 11 Memorial fountain at the footprint of where the North Tower once stood and the museum associated with it at left in the photo

A total of 2,606 people who were in the World Trade Center and on the ground perished as a result of the attacks and the subsequentcollapse of the towers.[6][117] This consisted of 2,192 civilians (including eightEMTs andparamedics from private hospital units); 343 members of theNew York City Fire Department (FDNY); and 71 law enforcement officers including 23 members of theNew York City Police Department (NYPD), 37 members of thePort Authority Police Department (PAPD), four members of theNew York State Office of Tax Enforcement (OTE), three officers of theNew York State Office of Court Administration (OCA), onefire marshal of the New York City Fire Department (FDNY) who had sworn law enforcement powers (and was also among the 343 FDNY members killed), one member of theFederal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), one member of theNew York Fire Patrol (FPNY), and one member of theUnited States Secret Service (USSS).[118][119] This total includes K-9Sirius, a Port Authoritybomb-sniffing dog.[120]

The average age of the dead inNew York City was 40.[121] The youngest victim was Christine Lee Hanson ofGroton, Massachusetts, a two-and-a-half-year-old girl who was a passenger on Flight 175. The oldest was Robert Norton, an 85-year-old retiree fromLubec, Maine who was on Flight 11. In the buildings, the youngest person was 18-year-old Richard Allen Pearlman, a volunteer medic, and the oldest was Albert Joseph, a 79-year-old maintenance worker for Morgan Stanley.[122][123][124] Ten pregnant women and their unborn children were killed in the attacks as well.[125][126][22]

TheTribute in Light on September 11, 2014, the thirteenth anniversary of the attacks, seen fromBayonne, New Jersey; the tallest building in the picture is the new One World Trade Center

Other victims includedBill Biggart, a photojournalist;[127]Keith A. Glascoe, an actor;[128]Nezam Hafiz, who played for theGuyana national cricket team;[129]Eamon McEneaney, aHall of Fame lacrosse player;[130] andDan Trant, anNBA basketball player.[131]

North Tower

The exact number of civilians and emergency workers killed in the North Tower is not conclusively known, but an estimated total of 1,600 is the consensus. Between 1,344[132] and 1,426[32] of these individuals were above the 91st floor when Flight 11 crashed between floors 93 and 99 at 8:46 a.m. Hundreds in the path of the impact or the ensuing flash fire were killed instantly. Some were fatally burned hundreds of feet below as the elevator shafts channeled burningjet fuel down as far as the lobby, where it exploded.[133]: 73  More than 800 people were believed to have survived the initial crash but were trapped;[134] the centralized impact into the tower immediately severed all elevator shafts in the central core from the 50th floor upward,[133]: 74  while all three stairwells in the impact zone were impassable. Seventy people on floor 92, the first floor below the impact zone, were also trapped because the stairwells were destroyed or blocked by debris.[135] Those trapped died from smoke inhalation, the fire, jumping or falling from the building, or were killed in the eventual collapse.[42] Although a few people would subsequently be found alive in the rubble following the collapse of the towers, none of these individuals were from the trapped floors.[136] Twenty-four people were still officially listed as missing in 2006[137] and as of September 2021, the remains of 1,106 victims of the attacks have yet to be identified.[138]

John P. O'Neill was a former assistant director of the FBI who assisted in the capture of1993 World Trade Center bomberRamzi Yousef and was the head of security at theWorld Trade Center when he was killed trying to rescue people from the North Tower.[139]Neil David Levin was the executive director of thePort Authority of New York and New Jersey, which was the governmental entity that built and owned the World Trade Center complex. He was eating breakfast in theWindows on the World restaurant at the time of the attack on the North Tower.[140]Cantor Fitzgerald L.P., an investment bank on the 101st–105th floors of One World Trade Center, lost 658 employees, considerably more than any other employer, and also lost 46 contractors and visitors.[141]Marsh Inc., located immediately below Cantor Fitzgerald on floors 93–100 (thelocation ofFlight 11's impact), lost 295 employees and 63 consultants.[142][143]Risk Waters, a business organization, was holding a conference inWindows on the World at the time, with 81 people in attendance.[144][145]

South Tower

The precise total of people killed in theSouth Tower has also never been verified, but it is believed that around a thousand civilians and emergency personnel lost their lives in the building that day. The National Institute of Standards and Technology report estimated that between 630 and 701 of these people were WTC employees,[133]: 238  all but 11 from floors trapped by the impact. Had the South Tower been struck first, Flight 175's hijacking would have been the deadliest suicide attack of the day, as more than 3,500 people were present in Floor 77 or higher at 08:46.[133]: 92  The 17 minute gap between the two impacts meant this figure had reduced substantially by 09:03.[133]: 96  More than 300 people were killed instantly by the crash,[134] two-thirds of whom came from the 78th floor sky lobby.[146][147][148][149] Those who remained were not completely trapped, but almost all still perished. The causes of death in the South Tower were identical to those in the North Tower, but in much lower numbers. The actions taken by trapped workers suggest that conditions were comparably more tenable in the South Tower than its twin; hundreds of people fell or jumped to their deaths from the North Tower, but almost no one did from the South.[133]: 86  A total of 18 people from the impact zone escaped the South Tower using Stairwell A, the one stairway left mostly intact and negotiable from top to bottom when the tower was struck. There may have been others from the trapped floors who found Stairwell A but were caught in the collapse before they could escape.[133]: 239 [78] The relatively few employees killed below the 77th floor is something the9/11 Commission noted as being a strong indication that evacuation below the impact zones was a success, allowing most to safely evacuate before the collapse of the World Trade Center.[136]

Morgan Stanley's director of securityRick Rescorla was killed in the collapse of the South Tower when he ventured back in to rescue others still inside the building. In the wake of the 1993 bombing, Rescorla anticipated suicide attacks on the World Trade Center using hijacked planes as missiles. He strongly suspected the crash of Flight 11 was deliberate and ordered an evacuation of Morgan Stanley's offices in the South Tower as a precaution.[150] Morgan Stanley lost very few employees that morning, though this was due in large part to their offices being located on floors below the plane impacts rather than any preemptive measures taken by the company.Welles Crowther, a volunteer firefighter and equities trader forSandler O'Neill and Partners on the 104th floor, similarly lost his own life while voluntarily assisting in the evacuation, whereby he rescued as many as 18 people.[151] In spite of the decision being made to empty the floors occupied by Aon immediately following Flight 11's impact, the company still lost 175 employees in the South Tower,[152] the third highest death toll of any firm in the complex. The executive who initiated the evacuation of Aon's offices, Eric Eisenberg, was still above the 76th floor when the South Tower was hit, and was among those killed.[148]

World Trade Center Hotel

TheMarriott World Trade Center shown after the attacks

There is no precise number of deaths which occurred within the hotel as many who sheltered in the hotel during and after the collapse of the South Tower were protected by the reinforced beams that had been installed by the Port Authority after the 1993 bombing.[61] However, the pieces of the South Tower did cause catastrophic damage to the hotel, with the hotel being split in half by the falling debris, with survivors stating the pressure picked everyone up and carried them through the air. Hotel employees that were protected by the beams were ordered to evacuate while firefighters remained to attempt to dig out those covered by debris. After the collapse of the North Tower additional debris caused those stuck under the debris to be crushed and killed including two hotel employees; Joseph John Keller and Abdu Ali Malahi. Additionally at least 41 firefighters who had been attempting to clear the hotel and 11 of the 940 registered guests were killed.[62]

Deaths involving elevators

AUSA Today report estimated that approximately 200 people died inside the elevators, while only 21 escaped the elevators. However, it was later found that 16% of those who evacuated the South Tower used an elevator and simulations of the evacuation without elevators claim to show that the use of elevators saved about 3,000 individuals in the South Tower.[153] Many elevators did not plunge when the planes crashed through, but were left stranded in the shafts, leaving their occupants to be burned alive in the fires or trapped and unable to escape before the towers collapsed. With the exception of one case, when the elevators malfunctioned, safety features intended to keep people from plummeting down shafts trapped individuals inside.[154] One survivor recounted having to pry open a narrow gap between the doors of the elevator to escape by utilizing the stairs.[155] Similarly, a group of six found themselves trapped inside a North Tower elevator from the moment of impact until 9:30 a.m., when they managed to escape by prying open the doors and tunnelling their way through the sheetrock wall of the elevator shaft behind, still leaving them with nearly an hour to spare until the building gave way.[156]

Deaths by jumping or falling

Daniel Suhr was killed when a victim from 2 WTC landed on him.

As the fires raged inside the towers, some 100–200 people plummeted at speeds of 125–200 mph (201–322 km/h),[157] sufficient to cause instantaneous death upon impact, but not enough to lose consciousness during the drop.[42] Most of the people who fell orjumped from the Twin Towers came from the North Tower with as few as three spotted from the South Tower.[158] In spite of the extremely limited number of victims documented, a fatal accident took place when a person landed on firefighterDanny Suhr as he prepared to enter the South Tower at around 9:30 a.m., crushing his skull and killing him.[c]

Most of the people who fell from the World Trade Center are believed to have intentionally jumped to their deaths to escape the extreme heat, thick smoke, chemical exposure and fire,[42] although a number of accidental falls were seen when victims stood too close to the edge or clambered outside. Several attempts to climb down with a view to re-enter through a safe opening were made, none of which succeeded.[162][160][161][163] In some cases, the panicked crowds pushed people out, and victims in free fall struck those who were otherwise reluctant to take the plunge. Futile attempts to use fabric such as clothing as makeshift parachutes were sometimes made.[164] Some eyewitnesses believe they saw people jumping in pairs or in groups, and one survivor claimed to have seen as many as six individuals all holding hands as they fell.[165] Victims trapped in each tower made their way toward the rooftops in hope of helicopter rescue, only to find the access doors locked. Security Control employees on the North Tower's 22nd floor attempted to activate a lock release command that would have freed all areas in the World Trade Center influenced by the electronic control systems, including doors leading to the roofs. However, damage done to the electronics by the airplanes precluded any possibility of this order being executed; in any case, thick smoke and intense heat would have prevented rescue helicopters from landing.[166]

There has never been an official identification of who any of the specific people were that were filmed or photographed falling from the towers, including the person whose picture became known asThe Falling Man. The collapse of the towers before their remains could be removed from the scene made it impossible to determine which of the remains had been from people who fell and which had been killed in the collapse; a spokeswoman for theNew York Medical Examiner's Office pointed out that their bodies were in far too similar a state to those who were crushed in the collapse to distinguish them.[42] In seeking to determine where conditions were most dire and in particular which floors the fires were at their most intense,NIST analyzed video footage and photographs of people jumping or falling. Although they recorded 105 victims between each tower, they report that this figure likely understates the true number of those who died in this manner;USA Today suggested that the number of victims from the North Tower was somewhere in the two hundreds. The sight and sound of these individuals falling from the towers, then "smashing like eggs on the ground" horrified and traumatized many witnesses. Thedeath certificates of those who fell state the cause of death was "blunt trauma" due tohomicide.[167]

The discrepancy in the number of falling victims per tower is partly attributable to the differences in each impact as well as Flight 11's impact leaving considerably more victims trapped on a much smaller number of floors. Flight 11 crashed directly midway into the North Tower's central core between floors 93 and 99, destroying all three stairwells (A, B and C) in the impact zone while rendering every single elevator from the 50th floor upward unusable, either by the shafts being severed or the power being cut.[168] Workers on the 92nd floor, though technically beneath the crash line, were also ensnared by debris from the impact zone that had collapsed into the stairs on their floor,[169] and eight of them jumped one after the other less than 12 minutes after the plane impacted immediately above.[170] In addition to the blaze being densely concentrated within a much smaller number of floors, the centralized impact dispersed burning jet fuel across all four sides of the tower, ensuring there was little to no leeway for those trapped. Windows were broken by trapped occupants seconds after the plane flew into the tower, and the first jumper was spotted less than two minutes following the impact. There were over 800 people confined to a much smaller space than the roughly 300 people in the South Tower,[134] creating a bottleneck effect as the situation became dangerously overcrowded, demonstrated in theImpending Death photograph where dozens of people are depicted hanging from windows along the outside walls of the North Tower, something that was never seen in its twin.

It is highly likely that more people would have been seen falling from the South Tower if it had been the first building to be hit by a hijacked airliner; over 3,500 people occupied the 77th–110th floors at 08:46, around three quarters of whom had escaped from this zone before 09:03.[55] The airplane struck the South Tower's southern facade around 25 feet east of the center,[171] causing much more of the jet fuel to spray out into the open rather than spilling into the building. The fires were primarily confined to the east, with some spread towards the north and south sides. No impact damage or fire was observed on the west side or on floors above the aircraft's point of entry.[172] While windows were broken by occupants trapped in both towers, in the South, the locations were far more scarce. The three people recorded falling came from a single window towards the southern portion of the 79th floor's east side,[173] where the worst of the damage had been inflicted and fires were at their most intense,[174] suggesting conditions were more tolerable elsewhere. With a much lower impact zone of floors 77 and 85, as well as an entire side with no visible fires, those who survived Flight 175's crash were left with far more room to move away from the smoke and flames than those in the North Tower.[134] A major difference between the two crashes is that while Flight 11 eliminated all opportunities for escape above the North Tower's 91st floor, Flight 175's offset approach left the northwesternmost stairwell (Stairway A) physically intact when the plane impacted the eastern part of the south wall near the southeast corner.[78] While only 18 people from the trapped floors exited the South Tower safely, one NYPD unit crossed paths with a large group of civilians making their way down an unidentified set of stairs shortly before 09:58,[78] suggesting that other victims could have also been in the process of descending from the impact zone just prior to the collapse.[175]

Conspiracy theories

Main article:9/11 conspiracy theories

Contrary to some conspiracy theories aboutJewish people being warned not to go to work that day, the number of Jewish people who died in the attacks is variously estimated at between 270 and 400, based on the last names of the dead.[176][d][178]

List of the dead

The following list details the number of deaths reported by companies in business premises at the World Trade Center. The list includes WTC tenants (all buildings), vendors, visitors, independent emergency responders, as well as some hijacked passenger-related firms.[179] This list only includes 2,117 of the victims.

Dead Victims
CompanyTowerFloorsDeaths
Cantor FitzgeraldNorth101–105658
Marsh McLennanNorth93–100295
AonSouth92, 98–105175
Fiduciary Trust InternationalSouth90, 94–9787
Windows on the WorldNorth106–10772
Carr FuturesNorth9269
Keefe, Bruyette & WoodsSouth85, 88–8967
Sandler O'Neill and PartnersSouth10466
Euro Brokers Inc.South8461
New York State Department of Taxation and FinanceSouth86–8739
Port Authority of New York and New JerseyNorth3, 14, 19, 24, 28, 31, 34, 37,
43, 44, 46, 64, 66, 67, 73
37
Fred Alger ManagementNorth9335
Fuji BankSouth79–8223
Forte Food ServiceNorthCantor Fitzgerald21
ABM IndustriesSouth:4
North:13
N/A17
Risk Waters GroupNorthWindows on the World16
General TelecomNorth8313
Washington Group InternationalSouth9112
American ExpressNorth9411
Summit Security ServicesBothN/A11
Morgan StanleyBothNorth: 59–74
South: 43–46, 56, 59–74
10
EmpireBlue Cross Blue Shield AssociationNorth27–28, 30–318
Alliance ConsultingNorth1027
AramarkNorth: 2
South: 5
Observation Deck 1077
AccentureNorthWindows on the World6
Harvey Young YurmanNorthWindows on the World6
Bronx BuildersNorthWindows on the World5
Forest ElectricNorthCantor Fitzgerald5
Harris BeachSouth855
OCS SecurityThroughout ComplexN/A5
RegusSouth935
Baseline Financial ServicesSouth77–784
CompaqNorthWindows on the World4
Data SynapseNorthWindows on the World4
International Office CentersNorth794
Merrill LynchNorthWindows on the World4
Mizuho CapitalSouth804
OracleNorth994
Pitney BowesSouth1024
PwCN/AN/A5
Wachovia Corp.North474
Wipro TechnologiesNorth974
Zurich American InsuranceNorth: 2
South: 2
1054
Bank of AmericaNorth813
Bank of New YorkBarclay StreetKilled by falling debris3
Bloomberg L.P.NorthWindows on the World3
CallixaNorthWindows on the World3
The Chuo Mitsui Trust & Banking CoSouth833
CitibankNorth1053
EncompysNorthWindows on the World3
IPC Kleinknecht Electric Co.North1053
IQ Financial SystemsSouth833
New York State Department of TransportationNorth823
Reinsurance SolutionsNorth943
Structure ToneNorth: 1
South: 2
97, 1053
SunGardSouth102, 1043
Thomson Financial ServicesNorthWindows on the World3
Advantage SecurityNorthMarch McLennan2
BP Air ConditioningNorth1012
Certified Installation ServicesSouth1052
Denino ElectricNorth952
Deutsche BankWTC 4N/A2
Devonshire GroupNorth942
Fine Painting and DecoratingSouthObservation Deck2
First Commercial BankSouth782
FM GlobalSouth1022
Franklin Templeton InvestmentsSouth952
GenuitySouth1102
Guy CarpenterNorth942
Imagine SoftwareNorthWindows on the World2
Instinet (Reuters)North13–142
StudleyNorth86, 882
KeaneSouth782
Kidder Peabody-Paine WebberNorth1012
Marriott World Trade Center HotelWTC 3N/A2
Metropolitan Life InsuranceNorth892
NewYork-Presbyterian HospitalN/AN/A2
Nishi-Nippon BankNorth1022
Nomura Research Institute Ltd.NorthWindows on the World2
Ohrenstein & BrownNorth852
One Source Networks (Hudson Shatz)N/AN/A2
P.E. Stone Inc.SouthAon Corporaction2
Petrocelli ElectricSouthMorgan Stanley Offices2
RadianzNorthWindows on the World2
Random Walk ComputingNorth802
ReutersNorthWindows on the World2
Rohde & LiesenfeldNorth20, 32–332
Silverstein PropertiesSouth882
Slam Dunk NetworksNorth1012
SybaseNorthWindows on the World2
UBS-PaineWebberNorth1022
UME VoiceNorthWindows on the World2
VerizonSouth9–122
VestekSouth782
XeroxSouth: 1
North: 1
Fiduciary Trust International
Marsh McLennan
2
Zurich Scudder InvestmentsNorthWindows on the World2
A.L. SarroffN/AN/A1
Advent CorporationNorth1101
AIGSouth1031
Algorithmics Inc.NorthWindows on the World1
Allendale InsuranceSouth1021
American Stock ExchangeNorthWindows on the World1
ARC PartnersNorthWindows on the World1
ASAP NetSourceSouthFiduciary Trust International1
Association of Independent RecruitersNorth791
Avalon PartnersNorth831
BEA SystemsNorthWindows on the World1
Bear StearnsN/AN/A1
BMO Nesbitt BurnsNorthCantor Fitzgerald1
Boston Investor ServicesNorthWindows on the World1
Brink'sNorthBasement1
Cabrini HospiceN/AN/A1
Cadwalader, Wickersham & TaftNorthWindows on the World1
Cambridge Technology PartnersNorthWindows on the World1
Caplin SystemsNorthWindows on the World1
CBSNorth1101
Chase Manhattan BankNorthWindows on the world1
Civilian Complaint Review Board (Heart Attack)Rector StreetKilled by falling debris1
Colonial Art DecoratorsNorthWindows on the World1
Consolidated EdisonN/AN/A1
Credit Suisse First BostonNorthWindows on the World1
Cultural Institution of Retirement SystemsNorth391
Deloitte ConsultingNorthMarsh McLennan1
Empire DistributionN/AN/A1
EnPointe TechnologiesN/AThe Mall at the World Trade Center1
FM GlobalSouth1051
Federal Bureau of InvestigationN/AN/A1
Federal Home Loan Mortgage CorporationNorthWindows on the World1
Fine & Schapiro restaurantNorthN/A1
First Liberty Investment GroupNorth791
Forest Hills Ambulance CorpsN/AN/A1
Frank W. Lin & Co.North891
G.M.P. Inc.NorthCantor Fitzgerald1
Garban IntercapitalNorth25–261
GoldTier TechnologiesNorthWindows on the World1
Health CanadaSouth1051
Hill InternationalNorth641
Holland & KnightN/AN/A1
Howard Hughes Medical InstituteN/AN/A1
IBM GlobalNorth951
Industrial Bank of JapanNorthCantor Fitzgerald1
Insurance Overload SystemsNorth791
Internal Revenue ServiceN/AN/A1
Janus Capital GroupNorthWindows on the World1
Jennison AssociatesNorthWindows on the World1
Krestrel TechnologiesNorth1051
LaBranche & Co.South28–301
Langan Engineering and Environmental Services90 West streetKilled by falling debris1
Lee Hecht HarrisonSouth931
Lehman BrothersNorth38–401
LG Insurance Co.North31
Liberty Electrical Supply Inc.NorthBasement1
LION Bioscience AGSouth941
LJ GonzerN/AN/A1
MAS SecurityNorthWindows on the World1
May Davis GroupNorth871
McKeon-GranoSouth661
MetrocareN/AN/A1
Mitsui BankSouth831
MoneyLineNorthWindows on the World1
NanoTekN/ABasement1
National Acoustics Inc.North1031
NTX InteriorsNorth1021
Office Centers Corp.North791
OptusNorthWindows on the World1
Pfizer Inc.NorthWindows on the World1
PM ContractingNorth1031
Proven Electrical Contracting Inc.NorthN/A1
QRS Corp.Marriott World Trade Center171
ReliableN/AN/A1
Rent-a-PCNorthWindows on the World1
Risk Solutions InternationalNorthMarsh McLennan1
Royal & SunAllianceSouthAON1
Royston and ZamaniSouthFuji Bank1
ScientNorthCantor Fitzgerald1
Seabury & Smith Co.South491
Sidley Austin Brown & WoodNorth54, 56–591
Siemens195 BroadwayKilled by falling debris1
Signature Painting and DecoratingNorthCantor Fitzgerald1
Singer Frumento LLPSouth1041
Skidmore, Owings & MerrillSouthAON1
SodexhoNorth961
Soundtone FloorsN/AN/A1
Sweeney and Heeking CarpentryN/AN/A1
SyncorpNorthMarsh McLennan1
TCG SoftwareNorthWindows on the World1
Telekurs USANorthWindows on the World1
Westfield GroupSouth171
ThyssenKruppNorthKilled by falling debris1
Top of the World CafeSouth107, 1101
UBS WarburgNorthWindows on the World1
United StaffingNorthCantor Fitzgerald1
Vanderbilt GroupSouthHarris Beach1
Vital Computer ServicesNorthMarsh McLennan1
WABC-TVNorth1101
WCBS-TVNorth1101
WNBC-TVNorth1101
WNET-TVNorth1101
World Trade CenterN/AN/A1
World Trade Center Project RenewalN/AN/A1
WPIX-TVNorth1101

Pentagon

ThePentagon Memorial honoring the victims of the 9/11 terrorist attack on the Pentagon

At least 125 people working atthe Pentagon were killed, most of whom worked for theUnited States Army or theUnited States Navy.[180] Of those 125 deaths, 70 were civilians – 47 Army employees, six Army contractors, six Navy employees, three Navy contractors, sevenDefense Intelligence Agency employees, and oneOffice of the Secretary of Defense contractor[181] – and 55 were members of theUnited States Armed Forces – 33 Navysailors and 22 Armysoldiers.[182]Lieutenant GeneralTimothy Maude, an Army Deputy Chief of Staff, was the highest-ranking military official killed at the Pentagon.[183]

Aboard the four planes

The 265 fatalities (not including the 19 hijackers) aboard the four planes included:[184]

The dead included eight children: five on American Airlines Flight 77, aged 3 to 11,[189] and three on United Airlines Flight 175, aged 2, 3, and 4.[190] The youngest victim was a two-and-a-half-year-old child on Flight 175 and the oldest was an 85-year-old passenger on Flight 11.[191]Among those notable passengers killed on Flight 11 were television producerDavid Angell, who co-created the sitcomsFrasier andWings,[192] actressBerry Berenson, widow ofAnthony Perkins,[193] filmmakerCarolyn Beug, who produced the music video for "Right Now" byVan Halen, entrepreneurDaniel Lewin, who co-founded internet companyAkamai Technologies,[194] and astronautCharles Edward Jones.[195][196] Ice hockey playersGarnet Bailey andMark Bavis were travelling on Flight 175 when it was hijacked.[197] PhysicistWilliam E. Caswell,[198]Barbara Olson, television political commentator and the wife of then-U.S. Solicitor GeneralTheodore Olson,[199] retiredU.S. NavyRear admiralWilson Flagg,[200] and women's gymnastics coachMari-Rae Sopper[197] were aboard Flight 77.

Map of countries with September 11 casualties
  Countries with citizens who were victims of 9/11
  Countries with citizens who were terrorists during 9/11
  Countries with citizens who were both terrorists and victims (Lebanon)

Deaths by stabbing or slashing

While almost all of the passengers and crew who perished on the flights were killed in the ensuing plane crashes, some were murdered with knives or box cutters during the hijackings. It is believed that occurred at least[e] once on Flight 11 and twice on flights 175 and 93. There were no reports of hijackers being violent on Flight 77, although it was noted that they were carrying knives regardless and threatened their hostages with them.[201] It is suspected that on Flight 11, passenger Daniel Lewin's throat was slit after attempting to prevent the hijacking in some way or simply as a result of the terrorists trying to intimidate the passengers into submission,[202] while Mark Rothenberg on Flight 93 may have been killed for the same reasons.[203] One passenger aboard Flight 93 said a flight attendant had been killed without identifying her.[204] A process of elimination determined that Rothenberg was murdered in the early stages of the hijacking. On Flight 11, crew membersBetty Ong[202] andAmy Sweeney[205] reported separately that several people had been attacked with knives, including a man (Lewin) who had his throat slashed. Shortly after Flight 175 was commandeered by the terrorists, flight attendant Robert Fangman mentioned specifically that both pilots had been killed, adding that other crew members were non-fatally injured.[206]

At the time of the September 11 attacks, items like firearms and pepper spray were categorized as hazardous and could not be brought on-board without the airline's permission. However, pocket utility knives with a blade less than four inches in length were not prohibited; the hijackers took advantage of that fact to carry out the attacks.[207]

Foreign deaths

Russian PresidentVladimir Putin signs a condolence wall for casualties who were foreigners

Excluding the 19 perpetrators (15 of whom came fromSaudi Arabia, two from theUAE, and one each fromEgypt andLebanon), at least 372 people from 102 countries besides the United States died.[208][13][14][15] Below is a list of the nationalities of the foreign victims:

Foreign fatalities of the September 11 attacks (partial total)
CountryDeathsReference(s)
Antigua and Barbuda3[209]
Argentina4[210]
Armenia1
Australia11[211]
Austria1
Azerbaijan1
The Bahamas1
Bangladesh6[212]
Barbados3[209]
Belarus1[213]
Belgium1[214]
Belize1
Bermuda3[209][215]
Bolivia1
Brazil3[216]
Canada24[217][218][219][220]
Chile3[15][221]
China3[15]
Colombia18[221]
Costa Rica1
Cuba1
Cyprus1
Czech Republic1
Democratic Republic of the Congo1
Dominica2[209]
Dominican Republic26[221][222]
Ecuador13[221]
Egypt1
El Salvador2[15]
Ethiopia3[223]
France4[224]
The Gambia1
Georgia1
Germany11[15]
Ghana2[15]
Greece39[225]
Grenada1
Guatemala1
Guyana22[209]
Haiti7[209]
Honduras1
India250[226]
Indonesia1[227]
Iran1
 Ireland6[228][229]
Israel5[230]
Italy10[231][232]
Ivory Coast1
Jamaica19[209][233]
Japan24[219][234]
Jordan2[235][236][237]
Kazakhstan1
Kenya1
Lebanon3[15]
Liberia1
Lithuania1
Luxembourg1
Malaysia3[238]
Mali1
Mexico16[15][221]
Moldova1
Netherlands1
New Zealand2[239][240]
Nicaragua1
Nigeria1
Norway1
Pakistan8[241]
Panama1
Paraguay1
Peru5[15]
Philippines16[242][243]
Poland6[15]
Portugal5[244]
Romania4[245]
Russia1
Saint Kitts and Nevis1
Saint Lucia2[209]
Saint Vincent and the Grenadines1
Slovakia1
South Africa2[15]
South Korea28[219][246]
Spain1[247]
Sri Lanka1[248]
Sweden1[249][250]
 Switzerland2[15]
Taiwan1
Thailand2[251]
Togo1
Trinidad and Tobago14[209]
Turkey1
Ukraine1[252][253]
United Kingdom67[219][254][255]
Uruguay1[256]
Uzbekistan1
Venezuela1
Vietnam1
Yemen1[257]
Yugoslavia5[258][259]
Zambia1
Zimbabwe1

After the attacks

Two NYPD officers at the World Trade Center site five weeks after the attacks

During the attacks and afterwards, there was a large amount of toxic dust, debris and ash that was centralized around Ground Zero and created long-term health problems. Toxic materials such as asbestos, lead, and mercury were in the air and the debris, and many first responders and victims did not wear respirators.[260]

It was reported in 2018 that at least 15 FBI agents had died from cancer due to their roles in the aftermath and investigation of the attack.[261] Further, a medical director of theWorld Trade Center Health Program atMount Sinai Hospital reported in 2018 that out of the approximately 10,000 first responders and others who were at Ground Zero and have developed cancer as a result, more than 2,000 have died due to 9/11 related illnesses.[262] The Uniformed Firefighters Association of Greater New York also reported over 170 deaths of firefighters due to 9/11-related illnesses, and that roughly 1 in 8 firefighters who were at Ground Zero have developed cancer.[263] At least 221 policemen have died in the years since 2001 from illnesses related to the attacks in New York City.[264]

In 2020, the NYPD confirmed that 247 NYPD police officers had died due to 9/11-related illnesses. In September 2022, the FDNY confirmed that the total number of firefighters that died due to 9/11-related illnesses was 299. Both agencies believe that the death toll will rise dramatically in the coming years. ThePort Authority of New York and New Jersey Police Department (PAPD), which is the law enforcement agency which has jurisdiction over the World Trade Center due to thePort Authority of New York and New Jersey owning the site, has confirmed that four of its police officers have died of 9/11-related illnesses. The chief of the PAPD at the time, Joseph Morris, made sure that industrial-grade respirators were provided to all PAPD police officers within 48 hours and decided that the same 30 to 40 police officers would be stationed at the World Trade Center pile, drastically lowering the number of total PAPD personnel who would be exposed to the air. The FDNY and NYPD had rotated hundreds, if not thousands, of different personnel from all over New York City to the pile which exposed so many of them to dust that would give them cancer or other diseases years or decades later. Also, they were not given adequate respirators and breathing equipment that could have prevented future diseases.[265][266][267][268]

On September 25, 2023, the FDNY reported that with the death of EMT Hilda Vannata and retired firefighter Robert Fulco, marking the 342nd and 343rd deaths from 9/11-related illnesses, the department had now lost the same number of firefighters, EMTs, and civilian members to 9/11-related illnesses as it did on the day of the attacks.[269][270]

Forensic identification

Due to the mass amount of debris and the scale of the towers, many of those who were killed in the attacks were not found intact. It was reported that only 174 complete bodies were recovered from Ground Zero, out of the about 2,753 deceased. Many fragments were found in recovered shoes or pieces of clothing or pockets made from large pieces of debris, with 19,979 fragments recovered from Ground Zero.[271]

Identifications through DNA can be made by comparing theDNA profile of reference samples with those found in the human remains, through obtaining samples from personal items (toothbrush/hairbrush), banked biological samples, relatives, or other identified remains.[272] The extreme heat, pressures and contamination from the collapse of the buildings has caused some of theDNA to become degraded and unusable.[273] Samples were also degraded because some body fragments remained in the rubble for 8 to 10 months.[274] In response to this, the medical examiner's office and other scientific groups created new techniques to process the bone fragments. TheAssociated Press reported that the medical examiner's office possesses "about 10,000 unidentified bone and tissue fragments that cannot be matched to the list of the dead".[275] Bone fragments were still being found in 2006 as workers prepared the damagedDeutsche Bank Building for demolition.[276]

In order to extract the DNA, medical examiners pulverize the fragments, and compare the extracted DNA to the collection ofgenetic material from victims and/or their relatives, with scientists revisiting bone fragments multiple times in an attempt to identify the victims.[277]

Identification

2010s

As of September 11, 2012[update], a total of 2,753death certificates had been filed relating to the attacks.[278] Of these, 1,588 (58%) were forensically identified from recovered physical remains.[279][280]

On April 17, 2013, five possible remains were recovered after being sifted atFresh Kills Landfill onStaten Island. Themedical examiner said evidence of a possible victim of the attacks was recovered as well two days later.[281] On June 21, 2013, the medical examiner's office matched its 1,637th victim, a 43-year-old woman, to its list of victims as a result ofDNA testing of debris collected from the site. By family request, her name was not released.[282] On July 5, 2013, the medical examiner's office identified the remains ofFDNY firefighter Lt. Jeffrey P. Walz, 37, after they were retested. His remains were recovered months after the attack and was the 1,638th victim forensically identified.[283]

On August 7, 2017, the medical examiner's office matched its 1,641st victim. The victim was identified through retesting of DNA from remains recovered in 2001.[284] In 2017 it was reported that only 1,641 victims, or just under 60%, had identified remains.[277] On July 25, 2018, the medical examiner's office matched its 1,642nd victim. The victim, 26-year-old Scott Michael Johnson, was identified through the retesting of DNA from remains recovered in 2001.[285] As of October 2019[update], three additional victims were successfully identified over the course of the year, bringing the total number of identified victims to 1,645. 1,108 remaining victims, representing 40% of those who perished in the World Trade Center attacks were still yet to be identified.[286]

2020s

In 2021, four days before the 20th anniversary of the attacks, the New York City Medical Examiner's Office announced that the identification of the 1,646th and 1,647th persons: Dorothy Morgan of Hempstead, Long Island, and an unnamed man whose identity was withheld at the request of his family.[138]

On September 8, 2023, the New York City Medical Examiner's Office announced that it had identified two more people using new DNA technology. The identities of these two people, the 1,648th and 1,649th people to be identified forensically, were withheld from release at the request of the victims' families.[287]

Three more victims were verified and announced by the Medical Examiner's Office on August 7, 2025: Barbara Keating ofPalm Springs, California, Ryan Fitzgerald ofFloral Park, New York, and an adult woman whose name was withheld by her family. As of the announcement, 1,101 victims have yet to be identified. The office also announced they had "identified 22 human remains associated with previously identified individuals."[288]

See also

Notes

  1. ^The exact figure is unknown―some sources say 6,000[1] people were injured, while others go as high as 25,000.[2]
  2. ^The 2014massacre at Camp Speicher―often described as the second deadliest act of terrorism in history―is said to have killed between 1,095 and 1,700 people.[8] The upper estimate would tie it with the takeover and crash of American Airlines Flight 11, which killed 92 people on the plane and more than 1,600 in the North Tower as well as its surroundings for an estimated total of 1,700. However, until the true death toll of the Camp Speicher massacre becomes known, then the suicide hijacking of Flight 11 was the deadliest act of terrorism on record.
  3. ^The NIST report documented three victims who fell from the South Tower's east face, including one who either lost his balance or jumped,[159] followed by two more who tried to climb down.[160][161] There are conflicting reports that either one of these three, or a possible fourth, was the victim who landed on firefighter Danny Suhr, apparently near the intersection of West and Liberty Streets.[78]
  4. ^A survey of the 1,700 victims whose religion was listed found approximately 10% were Jewish indicating around 270 in total. A survey based on the last names of victims found that around 400 (15.5%) were possibly Jewish. A survey of 390 Cantor Fitzgerald employees who had public memorials (out of the 658 who died) found 49 were Jewish (12.5%). According to the 2002 American Jewish Year Book, New York State's population was 9% Jewish. Sixty-four per cent of the WTC victims lived in New York State.[177]
  5. ^On Flights 11 and 93, it is believed but never been definitively confirmed that the pilots were murdered during the takeover as well.

References

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