Five clones of a search and rescue dog which helped locate people trapped in the rubble of the 9/11 attacks were formally presented to their ancestor’s former handler.

James Symington, a former Canadian police officer, choked back tears as he formally took possession of the five descendants of his beloved German shepherd named Trakr, who died in April.

Symington was presented with Trakr’s offspring after winning a competition organized by California firm BioArts International — the ‘Golden Clone Giveaway’ — to find the world’s most ‘cloneworthy’ dog.

Symington said he hopes the puppies — Trustt, Valor, Prodigy, Solace and Deja Vu — will go on to follow in Trakr’s footsteps.

‘We’re here to celebrate that Trakr’s legacy lives on in these five beautiful puppies,’ he told reporters. ‘If they have the same attributes Trakr did, then hopefully they’ll develop into world class search and rescue dogs.’

Symington and Trakr arrived at the site of the World Trade Center collapse, commonly referred to as Ground Zero, on September 12, 2001 and were one of the first K9 search and rescue teams on the scene.

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