Statement
of David Lim to the National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United
States on March 31, 2003
I am
a Police Officer in the employ of the Port Authority of NY & NJ. I
have been such for the greater part of the last 23 years. On Sept. 11th,
2001, our Police Department suffered the greatest single day loss in Law
Enforcement history @ the World Trade Center. 37 Officers from every rank
(Superintendent to Police Officer) as well as my partner, explosive detector
K-9 Sirius were killed in the attack. Many would ask what the PAPD was
doing in the World Trade Center. A little known fact was that we were always
there. Since the Port Authority owned the buildings, we (the Police) were
responsible for the public safety therein. We were there in 93' as well
as on 9/11. We were in fact the first responders to this tragedy &
in conjunction with the NYPD, FDNY, EMS & other Emergency Service Units
actively participated in the greatest rescue effort this city had ever
seen.
On that
fateful day, my job was checking vehicles that were entering the WTC Truck
Dock for possible explosives. At about 0830hrs, I was in my office/kennel
on the B-1 level #2WTC. About 15minutes later, I felt the bldg shake. I
left Sirius in his kennel & responded to the mezzanine of #1 WTC to
assist people coming out of the "A" stairwell. I saw bodies falling onto
the Plaza & realized that I was needed on the upper floors. I proceeded
up the stars giving encouragement & calming the fears of the people
coming down. Those that were seriously injured I assigned to healthy personnel,
directing them to the triage area. On the 27th floor, I met a man in a
wheelchair with a friend. They were waiting for the crowd to clear before
attempting a descent. I left them with FDNY personnel & proceeded up
the "B" stairwell. This switch of stairwells later proved to be my lifesaving
decision. Upon my arrival on the 44th floor, I started evacuating those
on the floor towards my stairway. I heard an explosion & as I looked
to my left, a fireball blew out the windows, knocking us to the ground.
I knew now that we were under attack & proceeded down the stairway
with my people. On the way down, we cleared floors of any remaining employees.
On or about the 35th floor, I felt the bldg shake & thought that my
tower was collapsing. I then heard on my Police radio that #2 World Trade
Center had collapsed & we were ordered to evacuate Tower #1. We kept
going down & met up with Chief Romito, Capt Mazza & Lieut.Cirri.
They were assisted an injured male on the 21st floor. I advised my supervisors
of the order to evacuate & we all kept descending the staircase. On
the way down, we were losing our lights & could feel the bldg falling
apart.
When
we arrived @ the 5th floor, that's where I met Josephine Harris & Ladder
Co #6 (FDNY). I stopped to help her & got as far as the 4th floor when
the bldg started to collapse on us. The sound was akin to an onrushing
avalanche with the floors above us pancakeing down. When the noise stopped,
I was very lucky to still be alive. Josephine, 12 firefighters & myself
were the only ones left alive in that stairwell. After about 5 hours,
we managed to find our way out by an opening on the 6th floor. The devastation
around us unimaginable. We somehow had survived in a small "air pocket."
Ladder Co #43 assisted us out of the wreckage. We crossed the debris field
first towards Vesey St. (north) & then after being turned back by fire
& exploding ammunition (US Customs House #6 WTC) we went west towards
West. St. When we finally emerged, we turned to view the devastation
& were struck by the total destruction of the World Trade Center complex.I
grieve for many friends that I lost that day. I grieve for all those that
I didn't know. I also grieve for the best partner I ever had. Thank you
David W. Lim Police Officer PAPD K-9
**********
David
Waymond Lim is a first generation American. He was born in New York City's
Chinatown on September 2, 1956, more than a decade after his parents immigrated
to the United States from the Toison province of China. When they arrived
the Lim family opened a restaurant and began forming their new lives in
America. Six years later, in 1962, Mr. Lim's family moved to Rockaway,
Queens New York where he attended St. Mary Star of the Sea grammar school
until 1970. Mr. Lim graduated from Lawrence High School in Nassau
County and went on to attend Queensborough College & Farmingdale University.
It was in that tiny Chinatown restaurant where Mr. Lim first knew he wanted
to be a police officer. From a young age he developed a special interest
in law enforcement, as local policemen would often eat at his family's
restaurant. Mr. Lim learned early that the greatest duty of an officer
was to protect the citizens and enforce the law. Now, as a Port Authority
Police Officer, Mr. Lim continues a tradition of law enforcement service
where his commitment to the community can be felt daily. A police
officer since April 7, 1980, Mr. Lim has been assigned to many commands
during his tenure. His training in structural fire fighting, crime prevention
and elevator evacuation gave him the necessary skill set to be assigned
to the World Trade Center for most of his career. It was not until 1996,
when TWA flight 800 went down, that Mr. Lim decided to become a part of
the New York City K-9 Unit.
To
become a K-9 officer, Mr. Lim attended class for nearly three months at
the 341st TRS and at Lackland Air Force base. Along with that training,
he became certified as an explosives detection team with his first K-9
partner, Lena, a yellow Labrador Retriever. Following his training, Mr.
Lim spent the next three years stationed at any one of the three international
airports in the New York vicinity. Lena, his K-9 partner, had to retire
due to an injury, and in March of 2000, Mr. Lim trained a new Labrador
Retriever, Sirius. The new team was reassigned to the World Trade Center
and given the responsibilities of securing arrivals of VIPS, checking unattended
packages and vehicles and searching trucks as they entered the World Trade
Center complex. Mr. Lim currently lives New York with his wife Diane
and their two children Debra and Michael. Since the September 11 disaster,
he has been stationed at Port Newark where he is training another dog for
duty.
- www.9-11commission.gov
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September
2006
Sirius'
contribution eventually becomes clear
Posted
9/8/2006 9:22 AM ET E-mail | Save | Print | Reprints & Permissions
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Lim
on duty at his new job patrolling John F. Kennedy International Airport.
Enlarge
By Robert Deutsch, USA TODAY
Lim
on duty at his new job patrolling John F. Kennedy International Airport.
By Martha
T. Moore, USA TODAY
A dog's
water bowl turned up in the rubble at Ground Zero. The FBI gave it to the
owner's partner and closest friend, Port Authority police Officer David
Lim.
The bowl
belonged to Sirius, a bomb-sniffing dog that Lim left in his kennel in
the World Trade Center basement on Sept. 11 when he ran upstairs to help
evacuate the north tower. When the towers collapsed, Sirius was killed.
Lim,
50, was one of just 20 people to emerge alive from the collapsed towers.
He crawled up a north tower stairway after the building collapsed and came
out atop the rubble.
Afterward,
he overcame his shyness and for a year traveled around the country to tell
his story, honor the dead and be a role model for Asians, he says.
When
Lim went back to the K-9 unit, he was paired with Sprig, a black Lab. Last
year, when he was promoted to sergeant, it meant reassignment from K-9.
So the department allowed Sprig to take early retirement (at age 6) and
become Lim's pet.
Saying
goodbye to a second dog would have been more than Lim could bear, he says.
"I don't think I would have taken the promotion. ... To go home and tell
my kids I traded the dog for stripes?"
He still
works on the front line of defense, patrolling John F. Kennedy International
Airport.
For a
time, Lim says, "it was hard for me to figure out what (Sirius') contribution
was on that particular day. If I would have taken that dog and left the
building with him, nobody would have faulted me. I'd have saved the one
life I was responsible for. But I told him I would come back for him and
went to help the people. And he didn't make it, and I did."
Finally,
he inscribed on Sirius' bowl the answer to the question that troubled him:
"I gave my life so you could save others."

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