New York: Several September 11 victims` relatives who hope to get a New York City-maintained list of next of kin for those killed in the attacks took their case before a judge on Thursday.

The family members oppose a plan to put about 9,000 unidentified pieces of victims` remains underground in the National September 11 Memorial & Museum. They want the list compiled so families can be polled about the issue.

COMMERCIAL BREAK
SCROLL TO CONTINUE READING

Family members were consulted and OK`d the arrangement, city and memorial officials and some other victims` relatives have said. And releasing the list would violate families` privacy, the city has said. The relatives also say they were never consulted about the city`s plan to place the remains underground. The city and memorial foundation have said they conducted an extensive effort to include families in planning, and the plan for the remains has been known for years.

"The argument that this is known is incorrect. If it was well-known, we wouldn`t be here today," the families` lawyer, Norman Siegel, said as about a half-dozen of the relatives who are suing watched from the courtroom audience, some wearing photographs and pins with their loved ones` names and images.

"And that`s the underlying issue here: Who decides where the remains will go? Does the government decide, or do the families decide," or what obligations does the government have to consult them, he asked. The lawsuit proposes releasing the list only to a retired judge, who would send out a letter on the plaintiffs` behalf.

The city argued that under public-records law, the list would have to be released publicly if it were released at all, and that would invade victims` families` privacy and subject them to a deluge of unwanted solicitations and communications.

"There` a great privacy interest in names, home addresses of 9/11 victims` families," Thaddeus Hackworth, a city lawyer, told the judge. The fact that the relatives were caught up in the terror attacks "should not also mean that these individuals have given up all rights to privacy," he said.

PTI