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Posted: 2022-08-08T21:01:58Z | Updated: 2022-08-08T21:01:58Z

NEW ORLEANS (AP) Nearly a half-century after arson killed 32 people in a New Orleans gay bar, the City Council has renewed the search for the remains of four victims, including three who were never identified.

The UpStairs Lounge burned on June 24, 1973, killing 31 men, including two whose mother died with them, and injuring another woman and 14 men.

Ferris LeBlanc, 50, a World War II veteran who fought in the Battle of the Bulge, and three bodies burned past identification were buried next to each other in the citys unmarked potters field.

The motion passed Thursday directs the city attorney, property management director and chief administrative officer to provide all reasonable assistance toward recovering the remains.

The Citys callous and deeply inadequate response ... rooted in pervasive anti-gay sentiment made suffering worse for victims families and friends, states the motion written by Councilmember J.P. Morrell.

And, he wrote, Poor record-keeping and indifference continue to hamper the efforts of surviving family members to reclaim the bodies of victims and to provide them the dignity of a proper burial.

The council believes the city has a moral obligation to do all it can to aid the recovery and dignified interment of the victims of the UpStairs Lounge massacre, the motion states.

The council issued a formal apology for the citys response on June 23, one day before the fires 49th anniversary.

The council has promised to get to the bottom of this issue and do everything they can to help us bring an end to this story, LeBlancs family wrote in a statement to ABC News. We are cautiously optimistic for this renewed interest and are hopeful it will end in a positive resolution.

The blaze was the 20th centurys largest mass killing of gays, the City Councils apology and Thursdays motion noted. It was surpassed by the Pulse nightclub shooting in 2016.

The location of LeBlancs body was noted as Panel Q, Lot 32 of the graveyard, Robert W. Fieseler wrote in a book published in 2018.

But city officials said maps and other relevant records were destroyed by Hurricane Katrina in 2005, ABC reported later that year. The network had released a 45th-anniversary documentary about the fire and efforts to find LeBlancs body.

Shortly after the documentarys release, Mayor LaToya Cantrell appointed five staffers to help the family. But they dropped the matter after months of fruitless searching, the network reported.

LeBlanc was estranged from his family in California not because of his homosexuality but because he hadnt paid money owed to his grandfather, Fieseler wrote in Tinderbox: The Untold Story of the Up Stairs Lounge Fire and the Rise of Gay Liberation.

His body was identified after an anonymous caller told the coroners office that LeBlanc wore an antique ring made from a silver spoon, Fieseler wrote.

The other three were listed as bodies 18, 23 and 28, and buried more than a decade before DNA fingerprinting was developed.

Body 18, an over-eighteen-year-old white male, ... had no identifying tattoos and burns over 70 percent of him, Fieseler wrote. Body 28, over 60 percent of his body charred, met his final resting place with pants and an undershirt still grafted to his skin. Body 23, 90 percent burned, was the most unrecognizable figure who had been pulled from the ruins. All that is known is that he met his end wearing brown shoes and black socks.

Johnny Townsend, who interviewed more than 30 people who survived the fire for a book that he published in 2011, wrote that one survivor overheard two firefighters talking while the fire still roared.

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One was frustrated that he couldnt get up to the blaze, Townsend wrote. The other replied, using a slur for homosexuals, Let em burn.

___

Follow AP news about gay rights at https://apnews.com/hub/gay-rights.

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Thank you for your past contribution to HuffPost. We are sincerely grateful for readers like you who help us ensure that we can keep our journalism free for everyone.

The stakes are high this year, and our 2024 coverage could use continued support. Would you consider becoming a regular HuffPost contributor?

Thank you for your past contribution to HuffPost. We are sincerely grateful for readers like you who help us ensure that we can keep our journalism free for everyone.

The stakes are high this year, and our 2024 coverage could use continued support. We hope you'll consider contributing to HuffPost once more.

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