男友太凶猛1v1高h,大地资源在线资源免费观看 ,人妻少妇精品视频二区,极度sm残忍bdsm变态

   

WORLD / America

Cries for help out of 9/11 tapes
(AP)
Updated: 2006-04-01 09:26

American Emergency operators listening to trapped callers' heartbreaking pleas from the burning World Trade Center repeatedly said help was on the way while they struggled with crashing computers, utter confusion and their own emotions, several hours of 911 calls released Friday show.

In releasing the 130 calls, city officials edited out the voices of those who sought help. But the police and fire dispatchers often repeated the callers' words, reflecting the fear and chaos of the morning of Sept. 11, 2001.

Sally Regenhard, holds a photo of her son Christian, a New York City probationary firefighter who died on Sept. 11, 2001 while her husband Al Regenhard listens to compact discs of emergency calls on that day that were released in New York, Friday March 31, 2006.[AP]
Sally Regenhard, holds a photo of her son Christian, a New York City probationary firefighter who died on Sept. 11, 2001 while her husband Al Regenhard listens to compact discs of emergency calls on that day that were released in New York, Friday March 31, 2006.[AP]

The first call came seconds after terrorists flew a hijacked jetliner into the north tower of the trade center at 8:46 a.m. A second plane struck the south tower 17 minutes later, and by 10:28 both towers had collapsed, leaving 2,749 people dead.

Dispatchers assured the callers — most of them on floors above the burning plane wreckage — that help was coming, or already there. In many cases, they had little to offer but compassion.

"OK, ma'am. All right," a fire dispatcher told a caller at 9:05 a.m., two minutes after the second tower was hit. "Well, everybody is there now. We're trying to rescue everybody. OK?"

Twelve minutes later, another dispatcher told a frantic caller trapped on the 105th floor of the south tower to instruct people to put wet towels over their mouths, lie on the floor and not open the windows.

"We are trying to get up there, sir. Like you said, the stairs are collapsed, OK?" the dispatcher said. "I know it's hard to breathe. I know it is."

The transcripts and nearly nine hours of audio recordings were released after The New York Times and relatives of Sept. 11 victims sued to get them. An appeals court ruled last year that the calls of victims in the burning twin towers were too intense and emotional to be released without their families' consent.

As a result, the transcripts held long blank spaces where the callers' words would have appeared.

Often, it was clear from conversations between police and fire department operators that they were not sure what had occurred. At one point a police operator told a fire dispatcher that a helicopter had hit one of the towers.

The operators managed generally to maintain their composure even as word spread that what initially appeared to be a tragic accident was actually a choreographed terrorist attack involving two planes and both towers.
Page: 12

 
 

主站蜘蛛池模板: 松潘县| 南汇区| 葵青区| 米易县| 七台河市| 武山县| 合川市| 翁牛特旗| 图们市| 定结县| 增城市| 容城县| 五大连池市| 镇平县| 乡宁县| 宜昌市| 高雄市| 华安县| 自治县| 新和县| 乾安县| 固镇县| 长寿区| 日照市| 西充县| 山阳县| 阿图什市| 巨鹿县| 浦江县| 竹溪县| 怀集县| 甘泉县| 永登县| 鲁山县| 民县| 鹤壁市| 南开区| 航空| 孟村| 云南省| 息烽县|