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New York City plans to move the remains of unidentified victims in the 2001 terror attack
to a new resting place within the 9/11 Memorial Museum, officials tell CNN.
The roughly 8,000 remains, which are in the custody of the Office of Chief Medical Examiner,
will be moved to the museum this year, spokeswoman Julie Bolcer said.
"We are making plans, but we are going to notify the families before we make any further
announcement," she said. The remains will be kept behind a wall in
an area off-limits to the public, according to 9/11 museum spokesman Michael Frazier.
The museum's website says the wall, which visitors will be able to view, is to be inscribed
with the following from the Roman poet Virgil: "No day shall erase you from the memory of
time." Only medical examiners and families of victims
will be given access to the repository, according to the spokesperson for both the museum and
the medical examiner's office. The decision to house remains in the museum
repository has been controversial. In 2011, 17 families of 9/11 victims filed
a petition in court to force the museum to consult with the victims' families before
deciding what to do with the remains. They eventually asked for a congressional hearing.
Both efforts were unsuccessful. On its website, the museum said the decision
to move the remains to the repository at the museum was because of overwhelming feedback
received from families after the attacks. The 9/11 Memorial Museum is scheduled to open
this spring as part of the part of the National September 11 Memorial & Museum at the World
Trade Center site. DNA identifications of the unidentified remains
will continue in the new repository, according to the museum.
In New York, 2,753 people were killed when hijacked American Airlines Flight 11 and United
Airlines Flight 175 were intentionally crashed into the north and south towers of the World
Trade Center. A total of 2,977 people were killed in New York, Washington and outside
of Shanksville, Pennsylvania.