The Denver Post

More cremated remains found at house, prosecutor­s reveal

- By Jesse Bedayn

The owner of a funeral home who is accused of keeping a woman’s corpse in the back of a hearse for more than a year, along with stashing over 30 cremated remains, attended a court hearing Friday at which prosecutor­s said even more ashes have been discovered at his residence.

Miles Harford, 33, stood quietly in court as the judge read the charges against him, including forgery, abuse of a corpse and theft. Prosecutor­s at the hearing said many more charges, similar to the current counts, may be coming after the latest discovery.

“The amount of harm that this man has caused that’s radiated throughout our communitie­s is far more substantia­l,” said Jake Friedberg of the Denver district attorney’s office, at the hearing. Friedberg said no additional bodies were found.

Harford’s case is the latest in a series of Colorado funeral home cases over the past decade, including a business illegally selling body parts and another leaving nearly 200 bodies to rot and allegedly sending families fake ashes.

The cases have shaken hundreds of Colorado families, leaving most to wonder if the cremated remains they received were actually their loved ones’, and many to learn that the ashes they spread, or clutched for years, weren’t. The discoverie­s have shattered the grieving process, with some having nightmares of their family members’ bodies decomposin­g.

With Colorado having the laxest funeral home regulation­s in the country — with no qualificat­ion requiremen­ts to own a funeral home and no routine inspection­s of facilities — the discoverie­s have prompted legislativ­e proposals to overhaul the whole system.

The discovery at Harford’s home was made during an eviction, when the body of Christina Rosales, who died of Alzheimer’s at age 63, was found covered in blankets in the back of a hearse. The 35 cremated remains were found stashed throughout the property, from inside the hearse to the crawlspace.

Although prosecutor­s said more ashes were found over the last few weeks, they declined to elaborate on the number of cremated remains or where they were found.

“We do have sets of cremains that should have been with their loved ones,” said Friedberg, who added that a number of people who are still alive but had already paid Harford for future funeral arrangemen­ts had contacted investigat­ors.

Given the recent discoverie­s, prosecutor­s asked for a more severe bail, which was not granted by Judge Arnie Beckman in the Denver County Court, given that the potential future charges haven’t been filed.

Still, “some informatio­n the court received I have concerns about,” said Beckman, who then upgraded Harford’s supervisio­n to include a GPS tracker.

Harford does not yet have an attorney to comment on his behalf. Phone calls to numbers listed as Harford’s in public records were not answered, and a voicemail couldn’t be left. Attempts to reach Harford by email have gone unanswered.

The latest proposals in the legislatur­e would require funeral home directors to get a degree in mortuary science and pass a national exam.

Another bill would require routine inspection­s of funeral homes from the state agency that oversees the industry.

 ?? THOMAS PEIPERT — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, POOL ?? Miles Harford appears in court to hear the charges against him Friday in Denver. Harford, a former funeral home owner accused of keeping a woman’s corpse in the back of a hearse for two years and hoarding the cremated remains of 35people, has been charged with forgery, theft and abuse of a corpse.
THOMAS PEIPERT — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, POOL Miles Harford appears in court to hear the charges against him Friday in Denver. Harford, a former funeral home owner accused of keeping a woman’s corpse in the back of a hearse for two years and hoarding the cremated remains of 35people, has been charged with forgery, theft and abuse of a corpse.

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