Families sue Harvard over theft of body parts from morgue, saying loved ones were picked over ‘like trinkets at a flea market’
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Three Massachusetts families accused Harvard Medical School of abandoning the donated bodies of their loved one in a “place of freakish-desecration” where they said body parts were picked over “like trinkets at a flea market,” according to a class action lawsuit filed Wednesday.
Glenn Wilder, Jeanine Cunningham, and Pamela Bishop said they trusted Harvard to care for their relatives but were “shocked and devastated” when they learned earlier this month that cadavers had allegedly been stolen in a theft ring at the school’s morgue in Boston and then chopped up and illegally sold.
Morgue manager Cedric Lodge, his wife and several others have been indicted for trafficking stolen human remains.
The lawsuit said that instead of caring for the remains, Harvard “abandoned them in a facility that was a place of freakish-desecration, where, according to the indictments, criminals were allowed to roam and pick over loved ones’ remains for bits like trinkets at a flea market.”
It also accuses the school of having lax policies and failing to properly screen and supervise its staff.
“When these individuals and their families made the generous and selfless decision to donate their bodies, they trusted their remains would be treated with utmost care, dignity, and respect and that their donations would be used to educate the future generation of doctors and ease the suffering of others,” attorneys John Morgan and Kathryn Barnett said in a joint statement. “Now, these families are left to relive the trauma of losing their loved ones and wonder what happened to their remains.”
Cedric Lodge, former manager of the morgue at Harvard Medical School, leaves federal court in Boston, on June 14, 2023. (NBC Boston)
Harvard Medical School said in a statement Thursday that it does not comment on pending or ongoing litigation. In a June 14 statement, the dean said they were “appalled to learn that something so disturbing could happen on our campus — a community dedicated to healing and serving others.”
Wilder’s father, Glenn Wilder Sr., had told his family he wanted his remains donated to the school’s Anatomical Gift Program “for the greater good,” the suit said. The family upheld his wish following his death on June 1, 2019.
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“As he was dying of lung cancer, Glenn, Sr. told the family that, through this gift, he hopped he could save someone else from the kind of suffering he was enduring,” the suit said. “Glenn, Sr. believed that Harvard was ‘the bastion of excellence,’ and that defendants would treat his remains with the utmost respect, while maximizing the educational, medical and scientific benefit his remains could bestow.”
Harvard had the remains for nearly two years before returning what the school said were his ashes, according to the lawsuit.
Cunningham and her four siblings said they donated the remains of their father, Marshall Jolotta, after his death on Nov. 25, 2017, the suit said.
Jolotta “felt that, through this generous gift, he could help others, and he wanted to help make young doctors better,” it said.
Harvard had the remains for nearly two years before returning the ashes to the family.
Bishop also donated the remains of her father, Joseph Gagne, after he died on June 4, 2018. She and her sister said in the suit that Gagne wanted to be gifted to the program “for the betterment of all.”
“It was important to him that he be able, with his last, generous, act, to help new doctors, to be part of educating medical students and to provide what help he could for the good of all,” the lawsuit said.
His remains were kept at the school for about a year before his ashes were returned to the family.
Lodge, the morgue manager, is accused of stealing organs and other body parts before their scheduled cremations and transporting them to his home in Goffstown, New Hampshire, federal prosecutors said in a statement. Lodge and his wife, Denise Lodge, allegedly sold the remains to Katrina Maclean, Joshua Taylor, and others, the statement said. They are all included in the federal indictment, along with another man, Mathew Lampi.
A sixth person, Jeremy Pauley, was charged with criminal information, prosecutors said. Another woman involved in the scheme, Candace Chapman Scott, was previously indicted in Arkansas.
Prosecutors said that, at times, Cedric Lodge would allow Maclean and Taylor to come to the morgue and “examine cadavers to choose what to purchase.” He and his wife also allegedly shipped remains to Taylor and others out of state.
Taylor allegedly took some of the stolen remains back to Pennsylvania, where he lives, prosecutors said. He and Maclean resold the remains for profit, according to prosecutors. Pauley allegedly purchased remains from Taylor, Maclean and Scott, who is accused of stealing remains from an Arkansas mortuary and crematorium where she worked, the statement said.
Prosecutors also accused Pauley of reselling remains he purchased to Lampi and others.
An attorney for Taylor previously declined to comment on the allegations. Attorneys for the other defendants have not responded to repeated requests for comment.
The 15-page indictment does not go into extended detail about what the body parts were purchased for, but it does allege that Maclean shipped human skin to a man in Pennsylvania “and engaged in his services to tan the skin to create leather.” It also mentions a payment from Taylor that had the memo, “head number 7” and a separate transaction for “braiiiiiins.”
The attorneys for the affected families said in their joint statement that they want to “hold everyone responsible for this disgrace accountable.”
This article was originally published on NBCNews.com