Coverage archives
How to help
What you can do
Relief funds
Blood centers
Memorial services
Times, locations
Travel resources
Travel info.
Cancellation information, phone numbers, etc.
Boston traffic
Massport website
Car rental refunds
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List of victims
AA Flight 11
UAL Flight 175
AA Flight 77
United Flight 93
NY WTC
Pentagon
Flight 11
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Investigation
Anyone with information regarding the attacks should call the FBI at this number:
866-483-5137
Leave a tip online
FBI website
Hotlines
Those seeking information should call the following emergency hotlines.
United Airlines
800-932-8555
American Airlines
800-245-0999
Mass. Emergency Management
800-293-4031
Massport
617-568-3100
MBTA
617-222-1000
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Victims of the Boston flights
American Airlines Flight 11
Anna Williams Allison, 48, of Stoneham: President of her own consulting firm, A2 Software Solutions. Was heading to California on a business trip. She loved gardening and cooking.
David Angell, 54, and Lynn Angell, both of Pasadena, Calif.: He was executive producer of the NBC television show "Frasier." "His fingerprints are all over some of the funniest moments in 'Cheers,' 'Wings,' and 'Frasier,'" said his creative partners, Peter Casey and David Lee. Lynn Angell was a school librarian and advocate for troubled children. The Angells were returning from their summer home in Chatham, Mass., according to his brother, The Most Rev. Kenneth Angell, bishop of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Burlington, Vt.
David Seima Aoyama, 48, of Culver City, Calif.: Worked for SGI-USA, a Buddhist association headquartered in Santa Monica. Aoyama was born in Hokkaido, Japan, and came to the United States in 1977. He leaves a wife and two teenage children, said his attorney and friend, David Kadin.
Barbara Arestegui, 38, of Marstons Mills: Flight attendant on Flight 11 She had worked at the airline for 13 years, and had recently switched from working on international flights to domestic flights. She grew up in California in a family with four daughters. She loved music, cooking, gardening, animals, and knitting. "She was a gentle soul. She was a character. She had spunk to her. She was alive, very kind, very loving," said her boyfriend Wayne Nichols.
Myra Aronson, 50, of Charlestown: A press and analyst relations manager for Compuware Corp. in Cambridge. She and a colleague were headed to Los Angeles for a conference.
Christine Barbuto, 32, of Brookline: Women's sportswear buyer with TJX, where she had worked for five years. She was traveling for work, along with six other TJX buyers. She leaves her father and two sisters. "She was a nice, bubbly, outgoing kind of girl," said a neighbor. "She was very sweet."
Carolyn Beug, 48, of Santa Monica, Calif.: Was returning to her home with her mother, Mary Alice Wahlstrom, after dropping her twin daughters off in Providence. She worked in music video production and was married to an executive at Warner Bros.
Kelly Booms, 24, of Brookline: An accountant for PricewaterhouseCoopers, Booms was on a last-minute business trip to Los Angeles. She hadn't even unpacked at her new Brookline apartment, said her friend, Cathy Saleh. "My kids were in love wth her," Saleh said. She was a 1995 graduate of Miami University of Ohio and had a boyfriend in Brookline. She leaves her parents and three younger brothers.
Carol Bouchard, 43, of Warwick, R.I.: Secretary in the emergency room of Kent Hospital in Warwick. She also participated in a mentor program for local youth. She leaves her husband, Fred. According to her friends and family, she was reluctant to go to Las Vegas with her friend Renee Newell because she was afraid to fly.
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