NEW YORK -- The mother grabbed her two boys and fled their home as it filled with water, hoping to outrun Superstorm Sandy.
But
Glenda Moore and her SUV were no match for the epic storm. Moore's Ford
Explorer stalled in the rising tide, and the rushing waters snatched
2-year-old Brandon and 4-year-old Connor from her arms as they tried to
escape.
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The youngsters' bodies were recovered from a marsh
Thursday - the latest, most gut-wrenching blow in New York's Staten
Island, an isolated city borough hard-hit by the storm and yet,
residents say, largely forgotten by federal officials assessing damage
of the monster storm that has killed more than 90 people in 10 states.
"Terrible,
absolutely terrible," Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly said as he
announced the boys' bodies had been found on the third day of a search
that included police divers and sniffer dogs. "It just compounds all the
tragic aspects of this horrific event."
The heartbreaking
discovery came as residents and public officials complained that help
has been frustratingly slow to arrive on stricken Staten Island, where
19 have been killed - nearly half the death toll of all of New York
City.
Garbage is piling up, a stench hangs in the air and
mud-caked mattresses and couches line the streets. Residents are sifting
through the remains of their homes, searching for anything that can be
salvaged.
Associated Press