Posted on 12/20/2001 3:14:19 PM PST by Gritty
If they owned a bunch of crematoriums, I think it is beyond stupid to just throw bodies into nearby woods. I smell BS...
If they owned a bunch of crematoriums, I think it is beyond stupid to just throw bodies and coffins into nearby woods.
Vaults may be a little harder to hide...I'm still leaning towards BS...
Yep, under Company Policy section 2A it says-- "do not take bodies out of coffins and dump them in the woods."
I used to be a cemetery salesman and for a short time (about 6 mo.) I worked for a cemetery that SCI had bought.
I was in this field for about 11 years, so I like to think I have a little bit of a grasp on the industry.
This article is totally bogus.
Cemeteries make tons of money in the pre-need field and there is a guaranteed paycheck in 'at need'. There are very few new cemeteries starting because the older ones either still have a lot of land or have gone to promoting cremation or (preferably) above ground entombment.
No cemetery is going to jeopordize (sp?) the gold mine of blue-haired Florida.
Sick.
Glad to see a voice of sanity.
As another who has worked in the funeral industry (embalmer and funeral director), mortuaries are under the microscope like never before.
There are no ACTUAL CITATIONS of INDIVIDUAL CASES where a SPECIFIC, NAMED HUMAN BODY was dumped.
This videotape sounds fishy.
Wade exec tells of finding five bodies |
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NEW HAVEN "Mr. Wade still has that body in the garage." |
Monica Hammie-Richardson said she overheard these chilling words when her co-workers at the Wade Funeral Home were chatting during a funeral. Hammie-Richardson, who is scheduled to testify today during a state hearing on the case, said she forced another Wade employee to show her the garage, which turned out to contain five unidentified, decomposing bodies. Hammie-Richardson has not previously spoken about these events. Her version of what happened is included in a writ filed with state health investigators by her attorney, William Bloss. State health officials have charged Hammie-Richardson, an administrator of the Dixwell Avenue funeral home and its president, Michael Wade, with failing to dispose of bodies "in a timely manner," operating a funeral home without a license and having unsanitary conditions. Wade's attorney, Steven Jacobs, said Monday his client has reached an agreement in principle with the state Department of Public Health that Wade will surrender his funeral home and embalmer's license and enter into a cease and desist order. Jacobs said this should not be construed as an admission of guilt or liability. In the separate criminal case, Wade was arrested Aug. 31 by New Haven police and charged with five counts of improper disposal of a body, as well as operating an unlicensed funeral home. The business is now closed. Police raided the funeral home June 26 and carried out the five bodies. Police detectives are continuing to investigate the case, but so far have been able to identify only one of the five bodies. They said that body was Fred Carmon, 76, of New Haven, who was stabbed to death in 1998. According to the writ, the state is wrongly seeking to punish the person (Hammie-Richardson) who did nothing to create the violations and contacted authorities about three weeks after she learned about two of the bodies. She began working there in February. The writ said Hammie-Richardson was at a funeral June 1 when she first learned about the gruesome situation in the garage adjacent to the funeral home. "She overheard two people who might loosely be called 'staff members' say that 'Mr. Wade still has that body in the garage,' " the writ said. After the funeral, the writ continued, Hammie-Richardson forced Joseph McCleese, a long-time funeral home employee, to unlock the garage. The garage was "disheveled and disorganized almost beyond description," the writ said. "McCleese pointed out two bodies, which were not readily visible." Hammie-Richardson immediately contacted her employer, Business Management Services Inc., a Florida corporation that contracts with funeral homes to "turn them around," the writ stated. She did not call authorities right away, the writ said, because she was concerned Wade would refuse to cooperate and the bodies would never be identified. The writ stated Wade indeed refused to help Hammie-Richardson with the identifications. Hammie-Richardson then called Michael Lynch, the city's registrar of vital statistics, and Dr. Leonardo Fernandez, a state assistant medical examiner, for advice on the situation, the writ said. When police came to the funeral home June 26, they found three more bodies in the garage. All of the bodies were in the garage for years before Hammie-Richardson began working there, the writ said. The problems at the funeral home "would not have been discovered had respondent (Hammie-Richardson) not brought it to light," the writ said. She "could have quit her job and not said one word to anyone," the writ added. "Wade would still be in business and the bodies would still be in the garage today." Bloss also filed an affidavit by Dale Fiore, superintendent of the Evergreen Cemetery, who said Hammie-Richardson called him in June to report there were two bodies in the garage. Fiore said Hammie-Richardson was upset, scared and working hard to identify the bodies. |
©New Haven Register 2001 |
Hey, there are crooks in all businesses. The article at the top of this thread, however, is an attempt to win the lottery by suing the corporate managment of this funeral home in Florida.
And, I still haven't seen specific charges.
LOL!! Yes, if you bury democrats, it makes it too hard for them to get out and vote on election day.
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