During the 9/11 World Trade Center terrorist attacks, Yehuda Kaploun spent two days at Ground Zero saving
lives. He watched as his friend, fireman Mychal Judge, died in a building collapse. Yehuda acted as a liaison officer
between the police, fire departments and the Orthodox Jewish community in the aftermath of the disaster that killed
thousands of people that day. After two days, when Yehuda finally went home, he took off his shirt, and without washing
it, put it into a sealed bag. Recently, he had the shirt tested by the RJ Lee Group laboratories. The results? The shirt
contained 93,000 times higher than normal limits of asbestos -- in addition to being saturated with the toxic chemicals
zinc, mercury, antimony, barium, chromium, cobalt, copper, lead and molybdenum. Yehuda's clothing is called the deadliest
shirt in the world. Experts are now calling Ground Zero the most toxic place ever, and speculate it will not be
known for years the amount of cancer that will result from the exposure for so many of the people who were there that
day, and worked there in the days that followed. But one thing is clear, the devastation, suffering and loss of life of that day continues. Yehuda shared in the interview, "I saw thousands of people covered in the dust. We were told there was no danger. Obviously, this isn't the case. It goes to show how wrong these people were who we trusted. I hope the government will do the right thing for all those who were at Ground Zero for any length of time." The heart broke then, the heart breaks now. Related posts we have done are: 9/11 first responders suffering with cancer sue city and WTC Ground Zero FDNY paramedic dies of lung cancer.


According to an attorney representing a group of
In 2001, after the 9/11 terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center, Debbie Reeve, a FDNY paramedic, spent several
months at Ground Zero working in the morgue. Two years later, she developed breathing problems. The next year, Reeve
was diagnosed with mesothelioma, a rare form of lung cancer. Mesothelioma is a malignant lung cancer linked to asbestos
exposure. Reeve was exposed to asbestos particles in the air caused by the collapsing twin towers. According to her
physician and her family, her work at Ground Zero is the direct link to the cancer that has taken her life. She died
Wednesday, leaving behind her husband, David Reeve, 45, a FDNY paramedic, and two children, a daughter Elizabeth, who
is ten years old, and a son Mark, who is only six years old. Her family said she suffered greatly leading up to her
death, as the cancer consumed her body. 









