Wednesday, June 27, 2007

Why didn't they warn us, asks 9/11 hero

Tuesday, June 26th 2007, 4:00 AM

WASHINGTON - For Lt. William Gleason, Christie Whitman has only brought pain.

Yesterday, the disabled Fire Department paramedic came to Washington to hear Whitman explain why she didn't warn him and thousands of other 9/11 responders that Ground Zero was more dangerous than they thought.

He was not satisfied.

"The sad part is, she tried to blame everyone else," said Gleason, who retired from the FDNY in 2004 as nodules started growing on his scarred lungs and his breathing deteriorated. "She was not open and honest."

Gleason, who worked out of Elmhurst Hospital Center, drove to Ground Zero on a "Gator" - a six-wheeled golf cart used to move bodies - because that was the only way to get there on Sept. 11, 2001.

He spent much of the next three days there, searching for survivors and treating some of the wounded. But there were relatively few of those, and he and fellow Emergency Medical Service officers ended up on a grim detail of combing through the dust and debris to recover and catalogue the body parts.

"It was find it, put it in the red bag and put in the container, write it up," he said. He carried a clean American flag on his cart every day in case he found one of the 141 friends he had lost.

"I'm not gonna put them under a dirty flag," he said.

That sense of loyalty and patriotism is what drove him in those days. He doesn't think Whitman gave it back.

"We just went in there to do our jobs, and we didn't ask too many questions," Gleason said. "You rely on the people above to watch your back, and they didn't."

Still, if he could, he'd rush to Ground Zero again, knowing the risks. "I would," he said. "But I'd protect myself."

http://www.nydailynews.com/news/2007/06/26/2007-06-26_why_didnt_they_warn_us_asks_911_hero.html

9/11 workers from Moore film fear political attack

By VERENA DOBNIK
Associated Press Writer

June 22, 2007, 4:36 PM EDT

NEW YORK -- Three ground zero workers who accompanied filmmaker Michael Moore on a trip to Cuba for medical treatment featured in his new movie "Sicko" charged Friday they were targeted by the U.S. government because of their participation.

"It's ridiculous after what we did for the city and the country on that day, that they won't allow us to go 90 miles offshore to get treated," said Reggie Cervantes, a 46-year-old EMT who worked with only a thin dust mask after the World Trade Center collapsed on Sept. 11, 2001.

The Brooklyn-based worker, among the first responders performing triage on the street below the burning towers, now suffers from severe pulmonary diseases, as well as kidney and liver problems.

Moore and the ailing 9/11 workers went to Cuba for treatment in March despite a U.S. trade embargo restricting travel to the Communist country. The U.S. Treasury Department's Office of Foreign Assets Control sent Moore a letter in May notifying the filmmaker that he was under investigation for travel violations.

Although the three workers have not received similar letters, all said they were expecting them. Cervantes was joined by another EMT, John Graham, 45, and a 9/11 volunteer, William Maher, 54, along with their lawyer, noted First Amendment attorney Martin Garbus.

Garbus said any investigation of the three was politically motivated, a charge made 11 days ago by Moore's attorney, David Boies. In a letter to the Treasury Department, Boies noted that Moore is well known as a harsh critic of the Bush administration _ particularly in his Sept. 11 movie "Fahrenheit 9/11."

Moore had asked the Treasury Department last fall to approve his Cuba trip under rules permitting travel there by journalists. Moore made the trip after receiving no response.

All three workers said they were denied treatment for various conditions by U.S. insurance companies that refused to pay for coverage. Each received treatment in Cuba.

Graham, of Paramus, N.J., suffers from esophageal burns, an enlarged heart and post-traumatic stress disorder. He said he has repeatedly been denied medical coverage and is still battling for Social Security disability benefits.

Cervantes, who now lives in Oklahoma, said workers' compensation and Social Security don't cover the medical tests she needs, and she now owes $17,000 for treatment and emergency room visits in the United States. She has no regrets about her Cuban excursion, where she said she saw nine specialists.

"I would have gone to the moon," she said. "We need treatment."

The three were not paid for their appearances in Moore's film.

http://www.newsday.com/news/local/wire/newyork/ny-bc-ny--sicko-workers0622jun22,0,3020596.story?coll=ny-region-apnewyork