Orlando Sentinel

New ‘body farm’ opens near Tampa, USF

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A “body farm” where researcher­s can study how corpses decompose will open next week in the Tampa Bay area with the burial of four donated bodies.

Officials broke ground Friday on the Adam Kennedy Forensics Field, a 5-acre patch of land north of Tampa. It’s the seventh such facility in the nation and the first in Florida’s subtropica­l environmen­t. The oldest and most famous body farm in the U.S. is at the University of Tennessee in Knoxville.

Officials in Florida hope their farm, to be used at first by detectives and forensic anthropolo­gists from the nearby University of South Florida, will draw scientists from other countries and grow to be the largest in the world.

“Our forensic crime scene investigat­ors will get premium training as a result of this,” said former Pasco County Sheriff Bob White. “This will enhance our training tenfold.”

Dr. Erin Kimmerle, a forensic anthropolo­gist at USF, predicts that by studying how bodies react to Florida’s sweltering humidity, more evidence will be preserved and breakthrou­ghs made in reallife cases. The research also would benefit other countries with subtropica­l and tropical climates, she said.

Bodies are obtained by donation. The first four will be buried next week, and in January, Kimmerle and other researcher­s will hold a course for detectives on exhumation. Later, other bodies will be exposed to water and buried during different seasons to determine how different factors affect decomposit­ion and evidence. After the bodies are studied, the skeletons will be cleaned and preserved and made available for future research.

“The legacy of the donations, it is forever,” she said.

About 30 people have already signed up to donate their bodies to the farm when they die. Kimmerle said if someone who wants to donate dies within 200 miles of the facility, researcher­s will pick up the body at no cost. Anyone beyond that range would have to pay for the body to be transporte­d to the facility.

While the center is a field and grove of trees near the Pasco County Jail, officials eventually hope to build an indoor-outdoor training center that would include classrooms, a morgue, a training facility and evidence storage.

The Florida Legislatur­e tucked $4.3 million for the facility into this year’s state budget, but it’s unclear whether Gov. Rick Scott will approve the budget. Kimmerle and Pasco County Sheriff Chris Nocco said they’ll also raise outside money for the project.

For now, researcher­s are concentrat­ing on the science. The field is named after one of the people who will be buried next week.

Adam Kennedy, 46, a principal at a local elementary school, died in a car wreck in January. His widow, Abigail Kennedy, said her husband always wanted to donate his body to science. On Friday, she spoke to a crowd at the forensics field.

“There’s so much bitterswee­t in all of this. Adam wanted to continue teaching after his death,” she said. “It would be my last gift to education, he’d say. This couldn’t be more perfect.”

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