These police officers were heroes who risked their lives for perfect strangers. They spent weeks or even months following the tragedy of 9-11 digging through the carnage while looking for survivors or remains of loved ones who didn’t make it out alive. They deserved only the best our government could offer them. Instead, they got the same kind of diluted health care our veterans get. I’m sure the Obama’s wouldn’t settle for this kind of treatment for their daughters, but then again…politicians in DC get the best of everything, don’t they?9-11 after

More police officers have now died as a result of illnesses blamed on the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks than the number of cops killed during the actual event as the tragedy unfolded 12-and-a-half years ago.

On Tuesday this week, 20 new names were added to the New York State Police Officers’ Memorial in Albany, NY, including 13 individuals who died in recent years due to 9/11-related illnesses. The Associated Press reported that authorities attribute those 13 deaths to cancers caused by rescue and recovery efforts in Lower Manhattan after the World Trade Center collapsed more than a decade ago.

All told, the memorial in the New York state capital now contains the names of 71 officers who died due to 9/11-related illnesses. The actual terrorist attack itself claimed the lives of 60 cops, and nearly 3,000 civilians.

“I live near the World Trade Center. I inhaled the toxic smoke that permeated every square inch of lower Manhattan,” New York state Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver said at Tuesday’s ceremony, the AP reported. “I know how nobly and heroically the NYPD carried out their duties on that tragic September day and the terrible days that followed.”

Peekskill– It was almost 10 years ago that Charlie Wassil, then a Peekskill police detective, went down to lower Manhattan with fellow emergency responders from across the tri-state area to the help at the site of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.cop died after 9-11

“People didn’t hesitate,” Wassil said. “They shouldn’t have to hesitate when their country is under attack.”

According to Wassil, if there were ever to be another attack, people might not be as willing to offer help based on recent changes made to the 2010 James Zadroga 9/11 Health and Compensation Act . The act is named for NYPD Officer James Zadroga, who died of a respiratory illness after the attacks, and was passed by Congress last year and put aside $2.7 billion for those injured or sickened by the 9/11 disaster and to the family of victims. But the federal government just announced that cancer would not be covered under the bill.

A quarter of the names added to the memorial this week, the Troy Record reported, were of cops killed in line-of-duty injuries suffered on the job. The majority of the new names, however, are of police officers who persevered for years after the 9/11 attacks while living with fatal illnesses attributed to the debris at Ground Zero.

“We cannot have a safe state without the sacrifice of our police officers,” Lieutenant Governor Robert Duffy said at the ceremony, according to the Record.

A total of 1,360 officers from New York state law enforcement agencies have their names on the memorial in Albany, which reads: “It doesn’t matter from which department they came, the feeling of loss is experienced the same.” With regards to the 13 new names added as a result of 9/11-related illnesses, a dozen were members of the New York City Police Department and one was a cop for law enforcement in Peekskill, NY.

Charles J. Wassil of the Peekskill Police Department died May 1, 2013 of illnesses he incurred while working at Ground Zero. He was only 52, but spent his last years advocating for healthcare coverage for other first responders, the Daily Voice reported shortly after his death.

“The next time something happens, guys are going to think twice,” Wassil said in 2011 at a ceremony held on the tenth anniversary of the attacks. “They’ll say, ‘Why should I go there if the United States is going to turn their back on me if I get sick?’”

“If you’re looking at guys who are 30 or 40 years old who spent so many hours at Ground Zero and are coming down with cancer, it doesn’t take a scientist to see that something was wrong down there,” Wassil said at the time. “Federal studies say a lot of things. They tell you a vitamin is good for you and they two years later they’ll say you shouldn’t have taken it.”

Earlier this year — more than 12 years after the attacks occurred — the United States Department of Health and Human Services program that provides care to first-responders injured during the terrorist attacks expanded coverage to victims with four types of cancer previously not considered, including brain cancer, pancreatic cancer, testicular cancer and invasive cervical cancer. Via: RT.com

REMEMBERING THOSE POLICE OFFICERS WHO GAVE THEIR LIVES FOR PERFECT STRANGERS ON 9-11:

New York City Police Officer Moira Smith – the only female officer among the 23 NYPD cops who died on 9/11 – led stunned and bleeding people from the twin towers – only to run back in and perish with so many other heroes in the effort to rescue more. Her daughter Patricia Smith was two years old when her mother died. Now 12 she said, “To everyone, it’s been 10 years. It seems like five.”

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Moira Smith helped save Edward Nicholls, then returned to help others and was killed. Corey Sipkin/ News

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Moira Smith’s daughter Patricia Smith was only 2 years old when her mother died as a hero during 9-11. She is pictured here holding the hand of her father James Smith at the 2006 Sept. 11 memorial service.

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