The Star Malaysia

Body exhumed after being buried by mistake

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ORANGE (California): Authoritie­s have exhumed the body of a Southern California man who was mistakenly buried three months ago after a body mix-up.

The coffin of John Dickens, 54, was removed from the Holy Sepulcher Cemetery by the Orange County coroner’s office.

At the family’s request, Dickens will be cremated and his ashes sent to his mother, 72-year-old Karen Bilyeu of Cherryvale, Kansas, the Orange County Register reported.

“It’s about time it was done,” Dickens’ sister, Diane Keaton, 52, of Parsons, Kansas told the newspaper.

“It’s been quite a while since we were notified that his body had been identified. We want him home so bad. It’s finally going to happen.”

Dickens, a US Army veteran, was homeless and suffered from mental illness.

His family had not heard from Dickens in decades when he died of an enlarged heart in May. His body was found outside a Verizon store in Fountain Valley.

However, the coroner’s division of the county Sheriff ’s Department identified it as that of another homeless man, Frank M. Kerrigan, 57.

Kerrigan’s family members said they were wrongly told that the body had been identified through fingerprin­ts.

They buried remains they thought were Kerrigan’s on May 12. Eleven days later, he showed up at a family friend’s house.

The coroner’s office finally confirmed Dickens’ identity through fingerprin­ts and notified his family in late June.

“I am very grateful that this man can head back to his family,” said Carole Meikle, 56, of Silverado Canyon, who is Kerrigan’s sister. “I have mixed emotions. It has been challengin­g going through this and having him buried there all this time. It’s heart-wrenching.”

Matthew Eaton, an attorney for the Kerrigan and Dickens families, has filed complaints with the county seeking US$3mil (RM12.9mil) in damages. Such claims often precede lawsuits.

The complaints contend that authoritie­s did not properly try to confirm the identity of the body because Dickens and Kerrigan were homeless.

The Sheriff ’s Department is investigat­ing the mix-up.

Meanwhile, in Portland, Oregon, a woman is suing a cremation company for US$2.5mil (RM10.75mil), claiming it gave her the remains of a stranger instead of her deceased father.

Kimberly Grecco, 53, discovered the remains were not her father’s as she prepared to spread the ashes on Father’s Day last year.

Grecco said she opened the box from Crown Memorial Center and found a tag indicating the remains belonged to someone else, according to the lawsuit.

She is suing Cascade Funeral Directors Inc, which does business as Crown Memorial Center as well as Cascade Cremation Center, and its president Randy Tjaden.

“People might think it’s just some ashes,” Grecco said. “But that’s my daddy. That’s my father.” — AP

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