The Guardian (USA)

Owners of Colorado funeral home where 190 bodies were found charged with Covid fraud

-

The couple who owned a Colorado funeral home – where 190 decaying bodies were discovered last year – have been indicted on federal charges for fraudulent­ly obtaining nearly $900,000 in pandemic relief funds from the US government, according to court documents unsealed on Monday.

The new federal charges against Jon and Carie Hallford add to charges in Colorado state court for abusing corpses. The 15 fraud charges filed against each of the Hallfords carry potential penalties of 20 years in prison and $250,000 in fines, according to the indictment.

The Hallfords did not have attorneys listed yet for the federal charges.

Michael Stuzynski, the attorney representi­ng Carie Hallford on state charges declined to comment on the case over the phone. Jon Hallford’s attorney for state charges works for the public defenders office, which does not comment on cases.

The couple have not yet entered pleas to the state’s abuse of corpse charges.

Even before the new indictment was unsealed, public records revealed that the Hallfords had been plagued by debt, facing evictions and lawsuits for unpaid cremations even as they spent lavishly.

The indictment alleges the couple used the $882,300 in pandemic relief funds to buy items for themselves, including cars, vacations, dinners, tuition for their child, cryptocurr­ency, cosmetic procedures and jewelry. They carried out the fraud and obtained three loans from March 2020 to October 2021, the indictment alleges.

Additional­ly, the couple took in another $130,000 from families paying for cremations and burial services they never provided, the indictment says.

Previously released court documents from the abuse of corpse case reveal more details about how they spent the money.

They bought a GMC Yukon and an Infiniti that together were worth over $120,000 – enough to cover cremation costs twice over for all of the bodies found in their business’s facility last October, according to previous court testimony from the FBI agent Andrew Cohen.

They also paid for trips to California, Florida and Las Vegas, as well as $31,000 in cryptocurr­ency, laser body sculpting and shopping at luxury retailers such as Gucci and Tiffany & Co, according to court documents.

But they left in their wake a trail of unpaid bills, disgruntle­d landlords and unsettled business disputes.

Once, the couple claimed to a former landlord that they would settle their rent when they were paid for work they had done for the Federal Emergency Management Agency during the coronaviru­s pandemic. The business’s website featured logos for Fema and the Department of Defense.

Fema has said they did not have any contracts with the funeral home. A defense department database search also showed no contracts with the funeral home.

In 2022, the company failed to pay more than $5,000 in 2022 property taxes at one of their locations, public records show. Then last year, the business was slapped with a $21,000 judgment for not paying for “a couple hundred cremations”, according to public records and Lisa Epps, attorney for the crematory Wilbert Funeral Services.

The new federal charges are the latest example of the owners’ alleged lies, money laundering, forgery and manipulati­on over the past four years, devastatin­g hundreds of grieving families.

The discovery of the 190 bodies last year, some that had languished since 2019, left families to learn their loved ones were not in the ashes they were given by the funeral home. Instead, they were decaying in a bug-infested building about two hours south of Denver.

An investigat­ion by the Associated Press found that the two owners probably sent fake ashes and fabricated cremation records. They appear to have written on death certificat­es given to families, along with ashes, that the cremations were performed by Wilbert Funeral Services, which denies performing them for the funeral home at that time.

When the decomposin­g bodies were identified in the funeral home’s facility, families learned that the ashes they held could not have been the remains of their loves ones.

As far back as 2020, there were concerns raised about the business’s improper storage of bodies. But there was no follow-up by regulators, letting the collection of bodies grow to nearly 200 over the following three years.

Colorado has some of the most lax regulation­s for funeral homes in the country. Those who operate them do not have to graduate high school, let alone get a degree in mortuary science or pass an exam. The case has pushed lawmakers to introduce bills bringing the rules in line with most other states, even surpassing some.

 ?? Photograph: Jerilee Bennett/AP ?? The funeral home in Penrose, Colorado.
Photograph: Jerilee Bennett/AP The funeral home in Penrose, Colorado.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States