WEBVTT 00:00.000 --> 00:01.960 [silence] 00:01.960 --> 00:07.980 [light piano music] 00:07.980 --> 00:11.980 [Dr. Laurel Freas] It's really important, you know, there's a promise that, that we make as a nation to 00:11.980 --> 00:15.550 our service members, and that they make to one another, that no one will be left behind; 00:15.550 --> 00:20.710 no one will be forgotten; and this is how the nation executes that promise. 00:20.710 --> 00:22.740 This is how we go about fulfilling that. 00:22.820 --> 00:25.680 [Dr. Paul Emanovsky] One of the main differences of what 00:25.680 --> 00:29.100 people expect to happen when they see it on TV or in the movies 00:29.100 --> 00:33.420 versus the reality of working in a human identification lab or a crime lab is 00:33.430 --> 00:38.489 that DNA results don't come back within that 30 minute episode. It takes 00:38.489 --> 00:44.590 oftentimes much longer for any of the analytical tests that we do to yield 00:44.590 --> 00:49.300 a result that we can use in the laboratory. The USS Oklahoma project was 00:49.300 --> 00:54.129 one of the main first projects that we've had to do as a concerted 00:54.129 --> 00:59.440 effort for a project, and we just recently hit the 200th ID milestone this 00:59.440 --> 01:03.320 past, this past week or a couple weeks ago. 01:03.320 --> 01:07.090 [Dr. Laurel Freas] The whole reason that we were able to do these disinterment projects 01:07.090 --> 01:10.690 is that now with the science and the technology that we have, we can make an 01:10.690 --> 01:15.939 argument that these remains that have been unidentified and unidentifiable for 01:15.939 --> 01:22.160 over 70 years now we have the capability to identify them. So the Oklahoma, you know, 01:22.160 --> 01:25.840 was sort of the pathfinder, the way forward that showed we can be 01:25.840 --> 01:30.670 successful doing this. And so based on their success, we we made the argument to 01:30.670 --> 01:34.540 disinter the West Virginia and the California. So the expectations 01:34.540 --> 01:38.890 are identical that we will be able to identify all or nearly all of the 01:38.890 --> 01:42.700 individuals from those two ships that are still unidentified. 01:42.780 --> 01:46.320 [Dr. Paul Emanovsky] The amount of effort that goes into recovering these remains and to making 01:46.329 --> 01:51.549 identifications is oftentimes a lot of hard research and analysis prior to even 01:51.549 --> 01:54.480 getting to go on an investigation or a recovery 01:54.480 --> 01:58.560 or an exhumation if it was a disinterment. And then once the remains 01:58.560 --> 02:01.600 are accessioned into the laboratory, be it from field work or from exhumations 02:01.600 --> 02:08.920 from cemeteries, there's just a large amount of information that we 02:08.920 --> 02:13.480 have to take in and analytical tests to perform that all kind of coalesce to 02:13.480 --> 02:17.040 become a picture of an individual identification. 02:17.040 --> 02:22.240 [Dr. Laurel Freas] I'm always surprised to hear that folks aren't aware that we're doing this, 02:22.240 --> 02:25.020 so it's really important to me to be able to spread that word so that people 02:25.020 --> 02:29.260 do know this is something that's ongoing and even if it takes 75 years or longer, 02:29.260 --> 02:32.570 we're not going to give up we're going to keep trying. 02:32.570 --> 02:38.639 [Music]