She was the first of several dozen people:
The number of people rescued by helicopter after the 1993 bombing remains a matter of some debate. The Police Aviation Unit, which operated the helicopters, said it has no record of the number. The police commander in charge that day has said the number was thirty-five. Port Authority officials have put the number as low as twelve. Emergency Medical Service officials in a 1994 report for the federal government,
The World Trade Center Bombing: Report and Analysis,
said that twenty-eight people needing medical treatment were removed from the two roofs. Interviews with people who participated in the rescues, and were on the rooftops that day suggest that the number was roughly several dozen, split roughly equally between the two towers.
There would be joint training runs:
Many of the details of the city’s use of helicopters in an emergency were first reported in Paltrow and Kim,
Wall Street Journal,
October 23, 2001.
On the 110th floor, Steve Jacobson:
Allison Gilbert, Phil Hirschkorn, Melinda Murphy, Robyn Walensky, and Mitchell Stephens, eds.,
Covering Catastrophe: Broadcast Journalists Report September 11
(Chicago: Bonus Books, 2002).
Chapter 10: “I’ve got a second wind.”
Drohan was at ground level:
Gerard Drohan, interview by Jim Dwyer, August 22, 2003. There is no transcript of De Martini’s radio transmissions; the account here is based on Drohan’s recollection.
… the carrier of devastation:
These circumstances were first and most emphatically documented by Dennis Cauchon and Martha T. Moore in “Elevators Were Disaster within Disaster,”
USA Today,
September 11, 2002.
On the single-file descent, someone teased Demczur:
Jan Demczur, interview by Jim Dwyer, October 6, 2001; Shivam Iyer, George Phoenix, interview by Jim Dwyer, October 8, 2001; John Paczkowski, Al Smith, interviews by Jim Dwyer, December 2001. Mike McQuaid, interview by Ford Fessenden, May 2002.