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Occupation: Updated recent works, the fact that he is retired, and additional occupation of Author. ~~~~~
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'''William J. "Will" Jimeno''' (born November 26, 1967) is a [[Colombian American]] [[Port Authority of New York and New Jersey Police Department]] officer who survived the [[September 11 attacks]] in 2001. He was buried under the rubble for a total of 13 hours, but survived, along with fellow Port Authority officer [[John McLoughlin (9/11 attacks survivor)|John McLoughlin]].
'''William J. "Will" Jimeno''' (born November 26, 1967) is an [[American]] [[author]] and retired [[Colombian American]] [[Port Authority of New York and New Jersey Police Department]] officer who survived the [[September 11 attacks]] in 2001. He was buried under the rubble for a total of 13 hours, but survived, along with fellow Port Authority officer [[John McLoughlin (9/11 attacks survivor)|John McLoughlin]]. He has written two books regarding the experience.


Jimeno was born in 1967 in [[Colombia]] but immigrated to [[New York City]] as a boy with his family.
Jimeno was born in 1967 in [[Colombia]] but immigrated to [[New York City]] as a boy with his family.
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The two men were located and extricated after former [[U.S. Marines]] [[Sergeant]] [[Jason Thomas (Marine)|Jason Thomas]] and [[Staff Sergeant]] [[Dave Karnes]] heard their cries for help. Both survivors, especially McLoughlin, were severely injured. They required several surgeries and months of hospitalization for recovery and rehabilitation. On June 11, 2002, McLoughlin (with a walker) and Jimeno (with a limp) walked across a stage at [[Madison Square Garden]] to receive the Port Authority's Medal of Honor.<ref name="Miracles"/>
The two men were located and extricated after former [[U.S. Marines]] [[Sergeant]] [[Jason Thomas (Marine)|Jason Thomas]] and [[Staff Sergeant]] [[Dave Karnes]] heard their cries for help. Both survivors, especially McLoughlin, were severely injured. They required several surgeries and months of hospitalization for recovery and rehabilitation. On June 11, 2002, McLoughlin (with a walker) and Jimeno (with a limp) walked across a stage at [[Madison Square Garden]] to receive the Port Authority's Medal of Honor.<ref name="Miracles"/>

==Books==

Jemiro is the author of two books, one for children, regarding the events of 9/11.

{| class="wikitable sortable"
|-
! Year
! Title
! Publisher
! [[ISBN]]
! Pages
|-
| 2021
| ''Immigrant, American, Survivor: A Little Boy Who Grew Up To Be All Three ([[Childrens book]]/[[Autobiography]])''
| Charles Ricciardi
| {{ISBN|978-0999698655|plainlink=yes}}
| 57
|-
| 2021
| ''Sunrise Through the Darkness: A Survivor's Account of Learning to Live Again Beyond 9/11 ([[Biography]]/[[Autobiography]])''
| University Professors Press
| {{ISBN|978-1939686992|plainlink=yes}}
| 220
|}



==Media==
==Media==

Revision as of 12:30, 11 September 2021

William J. "Will" Jimeno
Born (1967-11-26) November 26, 1967 (age 56)
Other namesWill
Willy
Police career
DepartmentPort Authority Police Department (PAPD)
Service years2000 - 2004
Rank2000 - Commissioned as a Police Officer
Badge no.1117
AwardsPort Authority Police Department Medal of Honor
Other workAuthor

William J. "Will" Jimeno (born November 26, 1967) is an American author and retired Colombian American Port Authority of New York and New Jersey Police Department officer who survived the September 11 attacks in 2001. He was buried under the rubble for a total of 13 hours, but survived, along with fellow Port Authority officer John McLoughlin. He has written two books regarding the experience.

Jimeno was born in 1967 in Colombia but immigrated to New York City as a boy with his family.

Career

At the time of the attacks, he was a rookie cop assigned to the Port Authority Bus Terminal. He saw the shadow of the airplane that seconds later hit the North Tower of the World Trade Center. He rode to the WTC site with 20 other Port Authority police officers in a commandeered bus.[1]

The collapse of the South Tower trapped Jimeno and two other Port Authority officers, led by Sgt. McLoughlin, under the Concourse between the twin towers. Only Jimeno and McLoughlin survived. Dominick Pezzulo survived the initial collapse but was killed by the collapse of the North Tower while he was trying to free Jimeno.

A USA Today account observed:

Sometimes they yelled for help. But mostly the 48-year-old sergeant, a 21-year veteran, and the 33-year-old rookie talked intimately, sometimes revealing personal things — about kids, families, feelings — that they had never shared with anyone. Jimeno asked the Sergeant to deliver a message over the radio to his wife, Allison, who was seven months pregnant. They had received no response earlier, but he thought maybe their radio call would be picked up on a police tape recording. "Attention," Sgt. McLoughlin announced, "Officer Jimeno requests that his baby girl be named Olivia." His wife had liked the name. He hadn't been so sure. Now, as he prepared to die, he wanted to think of his baby girl, Olivia.[1]

The two men were located and extricated after former U.S. Marines Sergeant Jason Thomas and Staff Sergeant Dave Karnes heard their cries for help. Both survivors, especially McLoughlin, were severely injured. They required several surgeries and months of hospitalization for recovery and rehabilitation. On June 11, 2002, McLoughlin (with a walker) and Jimeno (with a limp) walked across a stage at Madison Square Garden to receive the Port Authority's Medal of Honor.[1]

Books

Jemiro is the author of two books, one for children, regarding the events of 9/11.

Year Title Publisher ISBN Pages
2021 Immigrant, American, Survivor: A Little Boy Who Grew Up To Be All Three (Childrens book/Autobiography) Charles Ricciardi 978-0999698655 57
2021 Sunrise Through the Darkness: A Survivor's Account of Learning to Live Again Beyond 9/11 (Biography/Autobiography) University Professors Press 978-1939686992 220


Media

The entrapment and rescue were portrayed in the 2006 Oliver Stone film World Trade Center, with Jimeno portrayed by Michael Peña.[2]

On January 2, 2008, Jimeno appeared on the television game show Deal or No Deal and won $271,000.[citation needed]

References

  1. ^ a b c "Miracles emerge from debris", usatoday.com, September 5, 2002; accessed August 28, 2015.
  2. ^ Hoffman, Jim. "John McLoughlin and William Jimero. Survivors Whose Story Is Told by World Trade Center". 9-11 Research. Retrieved 11 December 2019.