NEW YORK - When the twin towers came down on Sept. 11, 2001, deputy police inspector Robert Lukach was there, working on the pile, digging through the rubble for survivors.
In this undated photo released by the New York City Police Department, NYPD Deputy Inspector Robert Lukach speaks with New York City Police Commissioner Raymond W. Kelly moments before a joint deployment to Haiti by 80 NYPD Emergency Service officers and New York City Firefighters. Lukach is the leader of the NYPD component of the joint NYPD-FDNY Urban Search and Rescue team that will search for trapped survivors of the earthquake in Haiti. (AP Photo/NYPD) (AP)
Capt. James Davolio and Lt. Paul Rogers prepare to leave for Haiti as part of the FDNY's Urban Search and Rescue team. Thirty-six firefighters, four paramedics and two FDNY physicians were deployed with the team on Jan. 14. (FDNY photo)
The FDNY members will provide any support needed in response to the harsh conditions in the area. (FDNY photo)
Joe Downey, a New York City fire chief, was there too. He also was in Mississippi after Hurricane Katrina and in Haiti after Hurricane Gustav.
Now, the men are leading a team of 80 specialists on a search-and-rescue mission through the wrecked mass of concrete and metal in Haiti's earthquake-ravaged capital, using technology that has been improved since the Sept. 11 attacks.
The squad touched down in Port-au-Prince on Saturday after a two-day wait for clearance to land at the destroyed city's overloaded airport.
By early evening, 16 members of the team were working to rescue five people trapped on the bottom floor of a three-story grocery store that collapsed during the earthquake, police spokesman Paul J. Browne said.
They were trying to cut through concrete blocks to reach the survivors, who told rescuers they had been living on food and water in the store, Browne said.
Before leaving, Lukach, who serves in the New York Police Department's elite Emergency Services Unit, said he was more optimistic about finding survivors in Haiti than he was at ground zero.
"That quickly became a recovery mission. But this is still a rescue mission, and we are hoping for the best," he said.
He said that even days after the quake, he is hopeful there are pockets in the rubble where people may still be alive, although the crew was worried they would arrive too late, after too much waiting around.
The team, which plans to spend at least a week in Haiti, is one of 28 federal urban search and rescue teams around the United States that can mobilize during a disaster.
They are bringing three tractor-trailers full of equipment, including sound gear to listen for survivors trapped below wreckage, cutting tools that can smash through concrete and shore up rubble as they burrow down, and rescue dogs.
"We can be more prepared for this because we're going in with more knowledge," Lukach said.
The cataclysmic earthquake rocked the impoverished island nation Tuesday. The Red Cross estimates that 45,000 to 50,000 people were killed. As humanitarian aid and troops have arrived from around the globe, the focus has already begun to shift to getting aid to survivors.
Downey's father, Ray Downey, died in the line of duty on Sept. 11. He was the former head of the fire department's Special Operations Command and a renowned expert in search-and-rescue and building collapses.
Downey has followed in his dad's footsteps as a special operations battalion chief. When he dug through the rubble in Haiti after Gustav hit in 2008, the collapsed buildings were mostly wood-frame, rather than concrete, he said, which made it easier to find people living in air pockets below the wrecked buildings.
"As each day passes ... it gets more difficult to find survivors," Downey said. "But they've had plenty of collapses in this country, and people have lived seven-to-10 days, and even longer. We're hopeful."
The team, made of 40 NYPD officers and 40 from the fire department, receives extensive training in structural collapse, concrete collapses and trench rescues, as well as high-angle and water rescues.
They regularly deal with structural collapses in New York.
"We are to some degree used to this," said Lukach. "We respond to small-scale disasters all the time."
The team hit the ground in Port-au-Prince with enough food, water and masks to keep them sustained for 72 hours as they work down into the mass of rubble.
Downey said they were also arriving with hope.
"We gotta get to work," he said.
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.