Suwanee on 9/11: '(Terrorists) Can Score, but They Can't Win'
City unveils its World Trade Center artifact during emotional ceremony at City Hall on Saturday.
Updated 9:35 a.m., Sept. 11, 2011 Suwanee Deputy Police Chief Janet Moon spoke through tears. Barely. Moon, speaking on behalf of two retired New York Police Department officers in attendance Saturday, told how one said that "the sights and sounds (of Ground Zero) can never be erased." Also choking up was Duluth resident Jack Curtin, whose brother Michael, a New York police officer, died in the terrorist attacks that hit New York on Sept. 11, 2001. "We're isolated from it now," Curtin told an audience of citizens, city officials and public safety officials, "but what we don't realize is that 3,000 people went to work that day and didn't make it home." Emotional moments were plentiful in front of City Hall as Suwanee held its 9/11 …