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Mitch
was working as a Court Officer when the towers were hit.
Being an EMT with the Bayside Volunteer Ambulance Corps
he rushed to the aid of the injured. Last known contact
with Mitch was with his father on his cell phone. Mitch
told his father he couldn't talk he was real busy. Then
his father heard a large rumble and then nothing; while
he watched on TV as the first tower collapsed.
Mitch-
After the second
plane hit the World Trade Center, Mitchel Wallace called
his fiancee. The sound of the sirens in the background
was deafening. Over the din, he shouted that there had
been a terrible accident. She screamed at him that it
was no accident, that it was a terrorist attack and
urged him to get out of there.
"He said, 'I
can't! I can't! There's bodies everywhere! I gotta
help!'" his fiancee, Noreen McDonough, said.
Yesterday, Wallace
and two other court officers, Capt. William Harry
Thompson and senior court officer Thomas Jurgens -- men
who did not have to be there -- were missing.
When the first plane
hit, they and their fellow officers raced to the scene
to help. Wallace wasn't even in uniform yet. "He
just responded as an officer with heart. He saw a
problem and ran to it," said Sgt. Patricia Maiorino,
a co-worker.
As panicked people
poured out of the building to escape, several court
officers ran upstairs to evacuate remaining workers.
Jurgens and Maiorino pulled people out of the building
to safety. Nobody thought the building was going to
fall, Maiorino said, so Jurgens and Wallace ran into the
basement to see if anyone needed help.
Moments later, she
said, they got a report that another plane was headed
for the towers. "We're yelling into the radio,
'Everybody get out! Everybody get out!'"
Then, she said,
"we hear a rumble, and the building starts to
fall." Unsure of what was happening, she, Thompson
and others ran inside. The south tower collapsed. The
force was so great, it hurled them into the north tower.
They broke holes through walls and climbed out from the
rubble. Frantically, they searched for survivors.
For a week they have
heard nothing of their fellow officers. They are still
searching, still hoping, she said.
At their homes in
the Bronx, the Meadowmere section of Lawrence, and
Mineola, the officers' families and friends have kept
vigil, desperately hoping the men would be found. They
wanted no mention of the past tense, no mention of
victims. "We still have hope here," said
Michele Miller, Wallace's sister.
Heroic acts are
nothing new to Wallace. In fact, New York State Chief
Judge Judith Kaye honored him in May for saving a man's
life.
A year ago, Wallace,
34, was riding the Long Island Rail Road when passenger
Mark Ingberman of Plainview went into cardiac arrest.
While other passengers stared in shock, Wallace raced to
his side and performed CPR for 15 minutes until
paramedics boarded the train, according to court
records.
"Mitchel
Wallace saved my dad's life, and if it weren't for him,
my dad wouldn't be here now," Ingberman's daughter,
Allison, said in a letter nominating him for the award.
Wallace even
followed Ingberman to Winthrop-University Hospital to
make sure he was all right and to tell his family what
happened.
That wasn't unusual
for him, said Wallace's mother, Rita, of Bayside.
"He took the cases almost too much to heart,"
she said.
Jurgens' wife, Joan,
knows there is no way she could have talked her husband
out of going to help. Even if she had begged and
pleaded, he would have been resolute about what he had
to do.
"It's just his
nature and his way," she said.
Jurgens, 26, and his
wife are newlyweds. They were married June 1. Their
favorite activity, she said, was simply spending time
together.
"Any kind of
crisis, he would always be the first one to
respond," Joan Jurgens said.
He was trained as an
emergency medical technician and a volunteer
firefighter, and his family used to tease him about
which uniform he was going to put on that day, said his
mother, Linda Jurgens. Helping people has just been a
way of life for him, she said.
Thompson, 51, has
been the sole support for his widowed mother, Maiorino
said. An instructor at the academy for new court
officers, he is respected for his professionalism and
dedication. As a captain, he was in charge of protecting
judges, she said. "This was a top-of-the-line guy.
There's nobody better than him."
~MITCHEL
WALLACE, WILLIAM THOMPSON AND THOMAS JURGENS did not
have to be in the World Trade Center. As state court
officers, they protected staff and participants in
nearby buildings. But when the first plane hit, the
three rushed through crowds of fleeing people and
upstairs to help, said Sgt. Patricia Maiorino, a
co-worker. She said she last saw Jurgens and Wallace run
into the basement. Moments later, they got a report
another plane was headed for the towers. "We're
yelling into the radio, 'Everybody get out! Everybody
get out!'" she said. Wallace, not even in uniform
when he went to help, was able to call his fiancee. Over
the deafening sirens, he shouted about a terrible
accident. She screamed back that it was no accident, but
a terrorist attack and urged him to get out of there.
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