NEW YORK -- As the first cases in the battle over illnesses linked to the cleanup after 9/11 near trial, an Associated Press investigation has found that several of the initial 30 suits contain inconsistent or exaggerated claims about how the workers got sick or how much time they spent at ground zero.
One demolition worker who said he developed health problems after toiling for six months in the toxic ruins of the World Trade Center actually has been severely ill since the 1990s. In a previous medical malpractice case, he said he was so sick between 2000 and 2003 that he couldn't work regularly. He never mentioned 9/11 during his testimony in that lawsuit.
Attorneys for a police officer from northern New Jersey who died in 2006 claimed in a court filing that he spent nearly 300 days handling debris at ground zero, but his work records indicate that his actual time and duties related to 9/11 were far more limited. During the months the attorneys said the man worked at ground zero, he was recording full-time shifts in Cresskill, N.J.
Another police officer, who was listed by her attorneys as having lung cancer, doesn't have cancer. Her actual illness involves something akin to chronic asthma. She insists her attorneys were mistaken.
The three cases are among the 30 plaintiffs whose suits are being considered for trial in May over new York City's culpability for chronic illnesses caused by exposure to contaminated dust in the months after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attack.
More than 9,000 legal claims were filed against New York City, and about 60 have gotten close scrutiny by the court. U.S. District Judge Alvin Hellerstein, who is overseeing the case, has said he hopes to whittle the initial trials, which will serve as a road map to settlements for the many other claims, to 12.
More than $1 billion in damages is at stake.
Story tools
Today’s Top Stories
- Woman Sentenced In Crash That Killed Daughter
- Man Found Shot To Death Inside Car
- Man Arrested In Burglary After GPS Bracelet Tracks His Moves
- Girl In Critical Condition After Being Pinned By SUV
- Web Site Tracks Franklin County Crime
- Public Donates $2K After Girls' Charity Money Stolen
- Theater owner recalled as innovator
- Fire Damages Downtown Costume Business
- Ohio State University Boasts Record Applications
- Woman Robbed, Pistol Whipped While At Work
-
BROADCAST TEAM
Join the Voice of the Buckeyes, Paul Keels, along with Jim Lachey, Marty Banister, and Skip
Mosic on game days for the best play-by-play coverage.
-
LISTEN ON GAME DAY
Can't watch the game on TV and can't get coverage where you live? Don't worry, you can catch every Buckeye game on-line with the Buckeye Web Blitz season pass.
Buy a season pass that includes every regular season game or buy passes one game at a time. Then you can listen no matter where you are in the world.
-
PODCASTS & REPLAYS
Catch all the great Buckeye programming from the Ohio State Buckcyes Radio Sports Network and affiliates all on-line anytime you want!
You can replay The Jim Tressel Show, Buckeye Roundtable, the Thad Matta Show, and other weekly and daily programming. You can't afford to miss an episode when it comes to the Buckeyes!
-
LISTEN LOCALLY
Tune your radios to your local Ohio State Buckeyes Radio Sports Network affiliate and you can listen to the game at home.
This site powered by and copyright, The Ohio State Buckeyes Radio Sports Network. All rights reserved. BuckeyeSportsPage.com provides links to other websites with whom we are not affiliated. We have no control over the nature, content, design, and availability of those sites. The inclusion of any links on our site does not necessarily imply a recommendation or endorsement of the view expressed within their sites.

