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Ocean City Honors 9/11 Victims

Ocean City Patrolman Jeff Doto, left, and Ocean City Firefighter Brian Warley place the wreath in front of the stage at the City Tabernacle during the 9/11 ceremony.

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By MADDY VITALE Dan Garrabrant remembers when the twin towers of the World Trade Center were taken down by terrorists in planes. He was in his third year working as an FBI Special Agent assigned to the Newark office. He saw the plumes of smoke after a plane hit one of the towers. On Sunday night, before an audience at the Ocean City Tabernacle, choked with emotion still, despite 21 years passing since that horrific day in history, Garrabrant recalled the terrorist attacks and the aftermath. He spoke of his long hours working in the days, weeks and months after the attacks, as information continued to unfold about terrorists living in the New Jersey. FBI Special Agent Dan Garrabrant recalls what he saw and heard during the attacks on 9/11. On 9/11 3,000 people lost their lives.  For those who were not born or too young to remember, Garrabrant, among other speakers Sunday, made it clear that it is a day that can never be forgotten. For the people who lost their lives attempting to save others and for those who simply went to work that day and ended up as a victim, they should never be forgotten, he said. “Twenty one years is a long time. Many may not remember, or they weren’t born yet. For me, I will never forget,” Garrabrant said from a podium, his voice filled with emotion. The images of what he saw so long ago seemed vivid as he spoke. He told of low flying military helicopters. “I thought, this was war,” Garrabrant said. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ubx84RCjYHw Video courtesy of Martin Fiedler, Just Right TV Productions Garrabrant became the supervisor with the evidence response team at the World Trade Center site in the aftermath of the attacks. “I found myself working 6 a.m. to 7 p.m.,” Garrabrant said, of the work that continued to unfold after the attacks to locate the other terrorists that were in the state as well as the cases involving anthrax. He spoke of when an airliner crashed into the Pentagon and when the passengers on a hijacked plane fought to regain control of the jet when it crashed in Shanksville, Pa. He told of those he knew who died and those who lost loved ones in the attacks. “Remember 911. Remember all of the sacrifices that were made. Remember the heroes that we lost,” Garrabrant said. “Never forget how lucky we are to live, love, worship and travel and believe.” Ocean City Fire Chief Jim Smith explains the heroism of those who gave their lives. During the ceremony, Mayor Jay Gillian spoke of the resiliency of the community and their strength at the time of 9/11. He spoke of the former Ocean City Mayor Bud Knight invited the community to gather at the Tabernacle in order to bring the city together during the difficult time in history. He said it is time to get back to a time when everyone is together and there is more acceptance, rather than division. “It’s time we get back to what it’s all about,” he said. Gillian looked at the audience and gave thanks. “I’m proud of the community gathered here,” he said. Gillian also reflected on not only the thousands of men and women who lost their lives, but to the families left behind. He asked that people remember them as well. Mayor Jay Gillian speaks of the importance of the community coming together as it did 21 years ago. The ceremony included poignant traditions including the Striking of the Four Fives, a fire service tradition noting the death of a firefighter in the line of duty. More than 400 firefighters, police officers other emergency workers died in New York on 9/11. Ocean City Fire Chief Jim Smith asked the community to never forget 9/11. “I don’t want to see us forget what happened. Firefighters, EMTs, police officers and civilians died,” he said.
Fire Chief Jim Smith performs the Striking of the Four Fives. Smith said Striking of the Four Fives is a tradition steeped in symbolism and is one responsibility that no chief wants to bear, because it signals the loss of firefighters. He struck the bell over and over again in honor of the victims of the 9/11 attacks from the twin towers, to the Pentagon to the field in Shanksville, Pa. The ceremony also included many other significant traditions such as the laying of a commemorative wreath. Ocean City Firefighter Brian Warley and Patrolman Jeff Doto carried the wreath down to the front of the Tabernacle with Charlie Rutan playing the bagpipes. The wreath is placed in front of the 9/11 memorial in front of the fire house headquarters. After the service inside the Tabernacle, Warley and Doto brought the wreath across the street to the Fire House headquarters at 550 Wesley Ave. to lay the wreath at the city’s 9/11 memorial, which features a beam recovered from the charred remains of the World Trade Center at the Fire House headquarters across from the Tabernacle. The program was emceed by Michael Allegretto, aide to the mayor. Ocean City Boy Scout Troop 32 presented the colors. Morgan Murphy sang the National Anthem and Natalie Argento sang God Bless America. Chaplain for the Ocean City Fire Department Rev. John Jamieson gave the invocation and the benediction. In his benediction, Jamieson said that on 9/11, “We were on high alert.” “I spent many hours with first responders,” he said. “We will never forget.” Bagpiper Charlie Rutan. Morgan Murphy sings the National Anthem. In front is Boy Scout Troop 32. Special Agent Dan Garrabrant, at left, stands beside Rev. John Jamieson. Members of the Ocean City Fire Department pose for a photo after the ceremony. Natalie Argento sings God Bless America.
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