Downtown
Express file photo by Nick Brooks
Firefighters Robert Beddia,
53, top left, and Joseph Graffagnino Jr., 33,
were killed Aug. 18, 2007 battling a blaze in
the damaged building at 130 Liberty St.
Deutsche
One Year Later:
Families still waiting
for answers as they grieve
By Julie Shapiro
Joseph Graffagnino Sr. never spoke with his
son about the dangers of firefighting.
They talked about how much Joseph Graffagnino
Jr. loved his job at the Engine 24/Ladder 5
firehouse, and they laughed over the practical
jokes the firefighters played on each other —
but they never spoke about the mazes of burning
buildings, the dark billowing smoke, the oxygen
tanks that run out of air.
“You try to block that out of your head,” the
elder Graffagnino said in an interview last
week. “You don’t want to think about that.
You’re always afraid of the phone call in the
middle of the night.”
As it turned out, the phone call came during
the day, when the father was at church.
It was one year ago, Sat., Aug. 18, 2007, and
the Deutsche Bank building across from the World
Trade Center site was in flames. More than 270
firefighters responded to the
asbestos-contaminated building, which was
damaged on 9/11 and was in the process of being
cleaned and demolished.
Where firefighters expected staircases, they
found plywood barriers. Where they looked for
windows, they found plastic sheeting. And at the
standpipe, where they expected torrents of water
to battle the blaze, they found not even a
trickle, because the standpipe was broken and it
had not been inspected.
Firefighters Graffagnino Jr., 33, and Robert
Beddia, 53, died of cardiac arrest when their
oxygen tanks ran out, leaving them only carbon
monoxide to breathe. Graffagnino left behind his
parents, wife, 4-year-old daughter and infant
son. Beddia was divorced and left behind two
older brothers and two younger sisters.
For Graffagnino Sr., 60, the approach of the
one-year anniversary of his son’s death stirs
memories and emotions that had not yet settled.
“I just want to get it over with,”
Graffagnino said. “The wound is always open…. It
never really goes away.”
His son’s death thrust Graffagnino into the
spotlight. While at first the cameras and
microphones just added to the surreal blur
following the fire, Graffagnino soon began using
his platform to advocate for firefighters’
safety. He successfully fought for changes to
the city building code, and at his urging, the
Fire Department is testing a new technology that
will help commanders find firefighters who are
trapped in burning buildings.
“I’m tying to make a positive out of a
negative,” Graffagnino said. “[But] I don’t know
why it takes a national calamity to get people
off their ass.”
The deadly fire came after years of Community
Board 1 and other local residents and activists
warning that the building was unsafe. The Lower
Manhattan Development Corporation, which owns
the building, hired an asbestos decontamination
subcontractor who had no experience and alleged
mob ties. A series of accidents led up to the
fire, and each time the community raised an
alarm. Each time, they were ignored.
In the year since the fire, abatement work at
the building has resumed under a new
subcontractor and much stricter oversight, but
demolition work is not expected to start until
early next year. In response to residents’
confusion and fear on the day of the fire, the
city launched a widely hailed emergency
notification system. But community members still
want more transparency from the L.M.D.C.,
especially regarding the chain of command.
Mourning the fallen
In the Engine 24/Ladder 5 firehouse on Sixth
Ave. at W. Houston St., the one-year anniversary
of the fire is a time to remember something that
no one had forgotten.
“They’re gearing up for it and girding
themselves for it,” said Victoria Grantham,
whose fiance is a firefighter there. The planned
memorial events are a good time for reflection,
Grantham said, “but they’re also a real
reminder.”
The firehouse is no stranger to loss. Eleven
of the house’s firefighters were killed on 9/11,
and the losses are magnified by the fact that
firefighters aren’t like ordinary co-workers.
“We’re a band of brothers,” said Ken Fulcher,
39, who has been with the Engine 24/Ladder 5
firehouse for 10 years. He responded to the
Deutsche Bank fire alongside Graffagnino and
Beddia.
“There’s no way to describe what it’s like,”
Fulcher said this week in a telephone interview.
“It’s very sad…. You think about it every day.”
At the same time, Fulcher said, the
firefighters have to move forward and take care
of their families.
“We do what Bobby and Joey would want us to
do: We hold our heads high and work,” Fulcher
said. “They’re looking down on us, smiling,
knowing we’re still going to work.”
Bobby Beddia was the leader, the senior man
in the firehouse. The firefighters called him
the “pope of the Village” because he knew all
the good restaurants and bars, Fulcher said. As
a bartender at Chumley’s in the West Village,
Beddia taught new firefighters the ropes of
bartending. He was a quick-witted Texas hold ‘em
player and an avid golfer.
Barbara Crocco, Beddia’s sister, described
him as “the typical big brother, always the
protector.” Beddia was the one who started up
games of kickball and volleyball with his troop
of nieces and nephews, and he was the first
grownup to jump in the pool with them. He loved
kids but had none of his own.
“He always made everyone around him feel
good,” Crocco said.
Beddia also was a charming flirt who in the
last year of his life would answer people with a
riddle when they asked how old he was. He’d
respond that he was in the year of his birth,
meaning that his age, 53, matched the year he
was born, 1953. A mathematician who heard about
Beddia’s pickup line later crafted the Beddia
Theorem to describe the relationship Beddia
noticed.
Beddia responded to ground zero on 9/11, and
afterwards he seemed more serious, less
carefree, Crocco said.
One day shortly after 9/11, a woman Beddia
had never met stopped by the firehouse, looked
in and just started crying. Beddia put his arm
around her and said, “Hey, wait a minute, you’re
supposed to be the one comforting me,” Crocco
said. The woman laughed, and she and Beddia
became friends.
When Beddia joined the Fire Department in
1983, Crocco used to call his firehouse whenever
she saw a big fire on the news, just to make
sure he was okay. He told her she was being
silly, and she eventually stopped. Now, Crocco,
50, can barely speak about him without crying.
“This week is going to be really tough,” she
said.
Joey Graffagnino was a happy-go-lucky guy who
was the life of the party and had a penchant for
playing practical jokes, said Fulcher, his
firefighter friend. Graffagnino tended bar at
the Salty Dog in Bay Ridge and was a bodybuilder
who won the title Mr. Ft. Hamilton.
“Joey always had a smile on his face, and he
could always bring a smile to someone’s face,”
Fulcher said.
When it snowed, Graffagnino Sr. said his son
trekked to the grocery store for the old women
who lived on his block, and he shoveled out the
neighbors’ cars. He wanted to be a firefighter
from the time he was a little boy. He spent six
years on the waiting list before being accepted.
“He was very uplifting, very spontaneous,”
Graffagnino Sr. said. “He would be the light in
the room. When [he’s] gone, it’s a huge void.
You can’t fill that void.”
Graffagnino Sr. has a similar uplifting
effect on people, greeting them with a smile
that is easy to return. And even when speaking
of his son, the memories are not all sad.
“He liked to cook, and I like to eat,”
Graffagnino joked recently. “It worked out
good.”
Beddia and Graffagnino were both good cooks,
especially Italian food, Fulcher said, but
Graffagnino had one quirk when it came to
sampling food the other firefighters cooked.
“Joey would only eat his mother’s meatballs,”
Fulcher said. “He wouldn’t eat anyone else’s,
not even his wife’s. That’s the type of guy he
was.”
Joe Hund, a Brooklyn firefighter and close
friend of Graffagnino Jr., called him “the
nicest guy in the world.”
On 9/11, Hund fought the fire that burned in
the basement and ground floor of the Deutsche
Bank building.
“I knew that day it had to come down,” he
said. “I lost a good friend in that building
seven years later.”
Placing Blame
Graffagnino Sr. places the bulk of the
responsibility for last August’s fire on the
L.M.D.C. He is suing them, along with the city,
Department of Buildings, Fire Department,
contractor Bovis Lend Lease and subcontractor
John Galt Corp. Beddia’s family filed a similar
civil suit. Both suits are on hold while the
district attorney investigates criminal charges.
Graffagnino said the district attorney was
supposed to do indictments this summer but now
pushed them to September or October. A source
told Downtown Express that the grand jury has
the month of August off and intends to wrap up
the indictments when they return in September.
Meanwhile, Graffagnino is getting impatient.
“People should go to jail for this,”
Graffagnino said. “Hitting a millionaire with a
fine is [B.S.]. You were [behind] this, you
could have stopped it. You should pay.”
Crocco, Beddia’s sister, added that she
doesn’t know if the indictments will make her
feel any better, but it’s important to hold
people accountable and punish them for what
happened.
Alicia Maxey Greene, spokesperson for the
D.A., would say only, “The investigation is
continuing.”
The Uniformed Firefighters’ Association
released a statement to Downtown Express saying
they have full confidence in the D.A.’s
investigation. The Uniformed Fire Officers
Association released a similar statement saying
Graffagnino and Beddia deserve a thorough
investigation of what went wrong and who was at
fault.
Community Board 1 passed a resolution several
years ago warning the L.M.D.C. about John Galt
Corp., but the L.M.D.C. ignored the warning.
After the fire, C.B. 1 submitted the resolution
to the D.A.’s office, hoping to make the case
that the L.M.D.C. was negligent in hiring John
Galt since the L.M.D.C. had reason to believe
the subcontractor was unfit for the job, a
senior C.B. 1 official said.
A source briefed on the D.A. investigation
told Downtown Express last year that while the
criminal investigation is taking precedence, the
D.A. plans to release a report citing the
non-criminal government mistakes that led to the
fatal fire.
L.M.D.C. chairperson Avi Schick declined to
comment for this story.
Graffagnino Sr. designs telecommunications
systems for a living, and after the fire he
decided to apply his work to communications
between firefighters in a burning building and
the commander back on the truck. Graffagnino
invented the idea of computer chips that track
firefighters, sending information about the
firefighter’s location and the amount of oxygen
left in his tank to the commander via radio
waves. If the Fire Department can overlay that
information on the Buildings Department’s
digital blueprints of buildings, then the
commander can guide firefighters toward exits
from the safety of the truck.
Several firehouses in Queens and the Bronx
are testing the radio wave technology, and
Graffagnino said he’s gotten a positive response
from the Fire Department.
“It definitely would have saved his life,”
Graffagnino said of the new technology helping
his son. “The first fireman that lives because
of this, I want to be there.”