Maui Authorities Seek Help in Identifying Missing Persons – Official List Released

2023-08-26 05:30:42

With the publication of this official list Thursday evening, the authorities hope to advance research to determine the true extent of the drama. “We need your help,” Maui Police Chief John Pelletier recalled in a video message, asking the public to contact the FBI if a name on the list matches someone safe and sound.

From 1100 to 388, but how?

Read also: In Maui, archipelago of Hawaii, a mobile morgue and charges

Since the disaster, local authorities have asked the FBI to intervene to standardize the data of numerous lists circulating on social networks or in accommodation centers, which listed thousands of missing persons. Many survivors have thus been identified and located.

Only 46 bodies identified

The authorities expect, however, that the human toll of the disaster, already very heavy, will worsen. Searching some charred buildings is proving extremely difficult and will likely take weeks more.

Read more: She escaped fire in Hawaii: ‘I screamed and prayed for my life. I felt the heat in my car”

The identification of the victims, whose corpses are often unrecognizable and require comparison with family DNA, is also laborious: only 46 bodies – for the vast majority of adults of a certain age, but also a 7-year-old child – have been identified so far.

Read also: In Hawaii, Joe Biden’s empathy will be put to the test

The publication of the official list of missing on social media has prompted several comments from people claiming that some names match those of safe and sound people. This method had already been used by the American authorities following the Camp Fire, a large fire which killed 85 people in 2018 in California and following which 1,300 people were initially missing.

In pictures: In pictures: Hawaii, the archipelago ravaged by multiple fires
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