Trending Topics

‘He was a fighter': Ret. NYPD sergeant dies from 9/11 related illness

Robert S. Fawcett, 64, served with the NYPD for 21 years, earning promotions to sergeant and homicide detective

NYPD

FILE - Members of the New York City Police Department listen to a news conference, Jan. 4, 2017, in New York. (AP Photo/Mary Altaffer, File)

Mary Altaffer/AP

By Mike Matteo
Staten Island Advance, N.Y.

STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. — Robert S. Fawcett, 64, a retired sergeant and detective with the New York Police Department, died after a long fight with 9/11-related illnesses.

“He was a fighter through all that,” his son Daniel Fawcett said. “He was. He always maintained his composure, despite me losing my mind.”

After growing up on Lyon Place in Westerleigh, Robert —or Bob, as he was known to many — graduated Port Richmond High School before completing his Bachelor’s degree at Wagner College.

In 1986, Robert followed in his father’s footsteps and joined the NYPD as part of the 62nd Precinct in southwestern Brooklyn.

During his 21-year NYPD career, Robert earned promotions to sergeant and homicide detective.

“I don’t think I saw him for three days after 9/11,” his son Daniel recalled. “After that, they opened up the landfill and he was one of the first people up there. He stayed at the landfill for as long as it lasted.”

After his work recovering human remains and personal effects at Fresh Kills, Robert was assigned to the 76th precinct in Brooklyn where he would eventually retire.

Beyond his time with the NYPD, Robert found work with Phillips & Jordan, the disaster relief company contracted by New York City to oversee relief and recovery work after 9/11.

“I think he was home for three months before he started losing it and decided that he needed to go back to work,” said Daniel Fawcett.

In his post- NYPD career, Robert was also instrumental in helping to salvage and donate items for exhibits at the 9/11 Memorial & Museum, according to his son Daniel.

His family remembered Robert as a hard-working father who would take on his children’s interests like they were his own. When not working, he loved to ski and play golf, and was a fantastic cook, especially of his grandmother’s pierogi recipe.

He is survived by his daughter Samantha, his sons Daniel, Christopher and Robert Brian, and his five grandchildren.

“He was always trying to improve not only himself, but his children as well,” said Daniel.

Trending
Doña Ana County Sheriff’s Deputy Antonio Aleman, 33, was killed when his patrol vehicle crashed into the back of the truck; he had served with the department since 2021
SB 4-C, which criminalized illegal immigration on the state level, was blocked by a lower court; Florida’s attorney general appealed to the Supreme Court to have the injunction removed
When a Marion County deputy stopped to check on the man, he fired a flare at the deputy’s cruiser and began to act erratically before being taken into custody
Ronald Mortensen, 59, was released from prison after agreeing to a plea deal and being sentenced to time he had already served

___

(c)2024 Staten Island Advance, N.Y.
Visit Staten Island Advance, N.Y. at www.silive.com
Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.