An NYPD sergeant who helped lead 9/11 restoration efforts “from day one” on the Staten Island landfill has died, in line with a police official.
Detective Sgt. Robert Fawcett died of a 9/11-related sickness on Sept. 14 and was laid to relaxation Saturday, stated Vincent Vallelong, his longtime pal and Sergeants Benevolent Affiliation president.
Fawcett, 64, spent 21 years with the police division.
“There was no higher companion or higher pal you’d need round you,” stated Vallelong, who labored with Fawcett within the Brooklyn South detectives squad.
“The man gave his life working on the landfill from day one. He was there when there have been swimming pools of water that have been effervescent,” he stated.
Fawcett, a lifelong resident of Staten Island, “was recognized for his unwavering dedication to his household and neighborhood,” in line with his obituary.
He’s survived by a daughter, three sons and 5 grandchildren.
“His son was there with him when he went into hospice and stayed with him till he finish,” the union president stated about Fawcett’s son, who’s a nurse. “It was tragic.”
The two,200-acre landfill in Contemporary Kills was closed in March 2001 — the final vestige of town’s rubbish dumps — however a piece of it reopened on Sept. 12, 2001, after Islamic terrorists crashed two industrial jets into the World Commerce Middle, collapsing the dual skyscrapers and killing greater than 2,800 individuals.
It stands because the worst assault on American soil.
As much as 18,000 tons of particles have been delivered every day from Floor Zero to the landfill over the subsequent eight months, earlier than the positioning closed once more for good.
A portion of the dump has since been become metropolis parkland.
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