Bizarre dead-body rumors impede Helene disaster response, NC county spokeswoman says
Bizarre dead-body rumors impede Helene disaster response, NC county spokeswoman says
    Posted on 10/11/2024
False social media rumors are hurting the emergency response to the Helene disaster in Western North Carolina, the spokeswoman for hard-hit Buncombe County said Thursday.

“1,000 unidentified bodies” at the Asheville hospital, one rumor claimed this week. “Buzzards everywhere.”

The Charlotte CEO/founder of a beverage company helped fuel the falsehood by spreading the rumor to her Facebook followers, according to a copy of her post reviewed by The Charlotte Observer.

Two-thousand people trapped in a Candler church, another since-debunked rumor stated.

And a photo shared online showed people in a supposed N.C. mountain mudslide during Helene. The slide happened elsewhere in the world and not during Helene, Buncombe County spokeswoman Lillian Govus said Thursday.

“Those are not true,” Govus said, replying to a question from The Charlotte Observer and The (Raleigh) News & Observer during her county’s daily Helene disaster-response news conference on Zoom.

“And those hurt, because ... we have to redivert resources and make sure that our emergency personnel check that off the list. And it may be the fourth time that we’ve done that.

“... It takes away time and resources from us being able to do those critical lifesaving maneuvers in our community,” Govus said.

“Verified information is critical at this time,” she said. “But as we are trying to disseminate accurate, correct and truthful information in real time,” investigating outlandish rumors “is a really big obstacle for us to overcome.”

“So I would ask that if you are so compelled to share information on social media, that those sources be from the county, the city of Asheville, the agencies that are supporting us at the federal level, at the state level with North Carolina Emergency Services, and verified individuals.”

Kody Kinsley, secretary of the N.C. Department of Health and Human Services, called the social media rumors of hundreds of bodies piled up “disinformation.”

“It’s just not true,” he said Thursday.

“We don’t have a big backlog of work here,” Kinsley said. “There’s no large number of decedents that we’re processing.”

As of Wednesday afternoon, North Carolina was working on identifying four bodies, he said.

The state has now confirmed 115 deaths from Helene, and the sheriff of Buncombe County has counted 72 just in his county, The News & Observer reported.

“Our search and recovery has not ceased,” Buncombe Sheriff Quentin Miller said. “We’ve been trying to do that 24/7. We cannot stop. We must continue to move forward.”

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Reporting human remains during Helene cleanup

If someone finds human remains while cleaning up debris, Kinsley said, they should call their local law enforcement’s non-emergency phone number. Those local officials will work with the state team to gather the remains and start processing them.

To help identify bodies, DHHS has shifted medical examiners from the eastern part of the state to the west. When a body is found, Kinsley said, it is collected by one of six fatality recovery teams working in the storm-damaged region.

Next, the body is taken to a central processing site where examiners first try to identify the person. When they were found in their home or were carrying identification, that’s easier. But sometimes, Kinsley said, identification requires DNA work or assistance from North Carolina’s State Crime Lab.

After a body is identified, the examiners work to determine whether the cause of death is storm-related. In the case of a drowning or the victim of a landslide, that’s obvious.

Other times, it’s more difficult, Kinsley said, as in the case of someone who is found in a home and could have died from either blunt force trauma or a heart attack.

Those cases require more extensive work from forensic pathologists.

DHHS tries to let families of storm victims know what happened as soon as it can, Kinsley added.

“We very quickly inform the family and then after that we add them to our storm total. And then we continue to process the remains to return them to the family,” Kinsley said.

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News & Observer reporter Virginia Bridges contributed.

This story was originally published October 11, 2024, 5:00 AM.
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