There, the authorities were able to use rapid DNA testing and other methods to quickly identify victims. Victim identifications come less than once a year today, a far cry from the years immediately following 2001, when there were hundreds of identifications each year.Īfter all, the collapse and recovery at ground zero was unlike smaller disasters, such as the condominium collapse in Surfside, Fla., that killed nearly 100 people in June. They were the first positive identifications since 2019.
Remarkably, the 1,647th match came days later: a man whose name the agency did not release in accordance with his family’s wishes. Her mother became the 1,646th World Trade Center victim to be identified through DNA testing. But through new technology, the medical examiner’s office matched her sample to a tiny bone fragment found amid the thousands of remains. Morgan had submitted a reference sample nearly two decades ago of her mother’s DNA - so long ago, she does not recall what it was. Like relatives of most of the other victims, Ms. Scientists are still testing the vast inventory of unidentified remains for a genetic connection to the 1,106 victims - roughly 40 percent of the ground zero death toll - who are still without a match so that their families can reclaim the remains for a proper burial. For 20 years, the medical examiner’s office has quietly conducted the largest missing persons investigation ever undertaken in the nation - testing and retesting the 22,000 body parts painstakingly recovered from wreckage after the attacks.