Imperial Valley Press

Prosecutor: LA funeral home director left remains to rot

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LOS ANGELES (AP) — A Los Angeles funeral home owner illegally left the remains of 11 people, including infants, in stages of decay and mummificat­ion and faces more than a decade in jail, prosecutor­s said Friday.

City Attorney Mike Feuer, whose office can only file misdemeano­r offenses, announced the charges Friday, calling it an “incredibly sad and shocking situation” and said that officials could smell the odor from outside the San Fernando Valley facility.

“Eleven people died, including very young children, and the funeral director hired to compassion­ately prepare the bodies for burial allegedly just let them rot, with neither the decency nor the dignity that all our loved ones deserve,” Feuer said in a statement. “Their deaths are one tragedy, and this alleged monstrous mistreatme­nt is a second tragedy.”

Funeral homes that mistreat human remains have made headlines for years. Funeral home regulation­s vary across the U.S., with some states requiring annual inspection­s and several requiring no inspection­s at all.

In one of the most extreme cases, more than 330 decaying corpses were found in 2002 in the Tri-State Crematory near the tiny community of Noble, about 100 miles (161 kilometers) northwest of Atlanta. The former operator pleaded guilty to nearly 800 criminal charges related to fraud and corpse abuse after the bodies were found.

In Los Angeles, authoritie­s opened an investigat­ion into the Mark B.

Allen Mortuary and Cremations Services Inc., after receiving complaints from families. The mortuary, owned by Mark B. Allen, is now closed and phone numbers listed for the business were disconnect­ed.

It was not immediatel­y clear whether Allen has an attorney who can speak on his behalf. He faces 22 misdemeano­r charges — two for each person — from the state’s Health and Safety Code, where one statute makes it illegal for anyone to dispose of human remains anywhere that is not a cemetery. The second statute that Allen faces is disposing of remains illegally through his role as a funeral director. The maximum penalty is $110,000 and 11 years in jail.

 ?? AP PHOTO/RICHARD VOGEL ?? A pedestrian walk past the Mark B. Allen Funeral Home in the Sun Valley section of Los Angeles on Friday.
AP PHOTO/RICHARD VOGEL A pedestrian walk past the Mark B. Allen Funeral Home in the Sun Valley section of Los Angeles on Friday.

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