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Saturday, January 07, 2006
NEW YORK — A
retired, 34-year-old New York City police detective who spent
hundreds of hours searching for Sept. 11 victims at ground zero
has died of a respiratory disease related to the cleanup, union
officials said.
James Zadroga is
believed to be the first emergency responder to die as a result
of exposure to World
Trade Center dust and debris, said Michael Palladino,
president of the Detectives' Endowment Association.
"Unfortunately,
I do not think he is going to be the last," Palladino said
Saturday.
Zadroga died
Thursday at his home in Little Egg Harbor, N.J., officials said.
Results of an autopsy were pending.
Zadroga had
developed black
lung disease and mercury on the brain as a result of working
at ground zero, Palladino said. Palladino said Zadroga had
worked up to 16 hours a day in rescue and recovery efforts the
first month after the Sept. 11, 2001, collapse of the trade
center towers.
He developed
shortness of breath and other respiratory problems in the months
after the attacks, and retired on disability in 2004.
A majority of
residents and ground zero workers tracked by several different
registries monitoring the participants' health have reported
worsening respiratory problems in the years since the attacks.
Zadroga, a
13-year veteran of the force, had a 4-year-old daughter. His
wife died of cancer in late 2004, Palladino said.
Asbestos,
Mercury and other Substances
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