Victim identification from the September 11, 2001 attack on the World Trade Center: Past trends and future projections.

Forensic Sci Int

Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency, 106 Peacekeeper Drive, Bldg. 301D, Offutt AFB, NE 68113, USA.

Published: November 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • Victim identification in mass fatality events is essential but complex due to severe injuries and body fragmentation, as seen in the World Trade Center (WTC) case.
  • Identification efforts have been ongoing for over 20 years, heavily relying on DNA testing, especially as body fragmentation increases.
  • A statistical model predicts that out of 3,404 unidentified remains, there could be 76 new identifications through DNA testing, with most future identifications being additional parts of already identified victims.

Article Abstract

Victim identification following mass fatality events is critically important. Extensive traumatic injuries and body fragmentation add complexity to this process. World Trade Center (WTC) identification efforts have been ongoing for over 20 years and this study tracks identification trends from the 2753 known WTC victims and the 21,905 recovered remains. For identified victims, data include the number of remains identified, date(s) of the identification(s), and identification modalities. Results show a heavy reliance on DNA due to body fragmentation. Other modalities played an important role initially, but DNA eventually became the singular identification modality. For large-scale disasters involving significant body fragmentation, aggressive DNA testing strategies are critical for victim identification. Over time, the number of linked remains (portions of previously identified individuals) will greatly outnumber the new identifications (first-time identifications). A novel approach using statistical modeling from ecology studies was applied to estimate future WTC identification rates using Identification Accumulation Curve extrapolation with the Good-Toulmin estimator. Projections indicate there will be 76 first-time identifications (95% CI: 49-117) through the successful DNA testing of 3404 unidentified, fragmentary remains. The remainder of the identifications would be additional portions of previously identified victims. These results may be instructional for management of other large-scale, protracted victim identification efforts.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.forsciint.2022.111463DOI Listing

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