NEW YORK (AP) – There are times when Ken Fairben, still mourning the loss of his paramedic son on 9/11, thinks he will never see the end of the complex, drawn-out legal case for the men accused in his death.
But “we’re willing to stay the course,” Fairben said Monday after watching the start of pretrial hearings for five men charged in the terrorist attacks. “It’s important for us to be here to continue his legacy, his memory. We’re his voice.”