The Morning Call

Philadelph­ia official forced to resign over treatment of remains from MOVE bombing

- By Claudia Lauer and Mark Scolforo

PHILADELPH­IA — Philadelph­ia’s top health official was compelled to resign Thursday after the city’s mayor learned partial human remains from the 1985 bombing of the headquarte­rs of a Black organizati­on had been cremated and disposed of without notifying family members.

Mayor Jim Kenney said Health Commission­er Dr. Thomas Farley made the decision regarding remains of the MOVE bombing victims several years ago.

The announceme­nt of Farley’s ouster came by design on the 36th anniversar­y of the MOVE bombing, after Kenney consulted victims’ family members. Among the 11 slain when police bombed the organizati­on’s headquarte­rs, causing a fire that spread to more than 60 row homes, were five children.

A lawyer who accompanie­d MOVE members to a meeting with Kenney, Michael Coard, described their reaction as “outraged, enraged, incensed, but mostly confused.”

In a statement released by the mayor’s office, Farley said that in early 2017 he was told by the city’s medical examiner, Dr. Sam Gulino, that a box had been found containing materials related to MOVE bombing victims’ autopsies.

“In the box were bones and bone fragments, presumably from one or more of the victims,” Farley said.

It is a standard procedure to retain specimens after an autopsy ends and the remains are turned over to the decedent’s next-of-kin,

Farley said.

“Believing that investigat­ions related to the MOVE bombing had been completed more than 30 years earlier, and not wanting to cause more anguish for the families of the victims, I authorized Dr. Gulino to follow this procedure and dispose of the bones and bone fragments,” Farley said.

The decision was his alone, and other top city officials were not consulted, he said.

After recent reports that local institutio­ns had remains of MOVE bombing victims, Farley said he reconsider­ed his actions and notified higher-ups. Kenney said Farley told him about what occurred late Tuesday, took responsibi­lity and resigned from the $175,000-a-year job he’d held for five years.

“I profoundly regret making this decision without consulting the family members of the victims and I extend my deepest apologies for the pain this will cause them,” Farley wrote.

Kenney said Farley’s decision lacked empathy. Gulino has also been put on leave pending an investigat­ion, Kenney said.

“I had the opportunit­y to meet with members of the Africa family and apologize for the way this situation was handled, and for how the city has treated them for the last five decades,” Kenney said in a statement.

MOVE members adopted the surname of the group’s founder, John Africa.

Kenney later told reporters that he had a long and difficult meeting with victims’ family members and agreed to publicly disclose the matter on the bombing anniversar­y at their request.

Coard said MOVE, a group that members describe as a family and an organizati­on, plans to respond to Kenney after deliberati­ng among themselves about what they consider to be a just result. A lawsuit is possible, Coard said.

“They had a lot of questions about why this happened, questions about, is this standard operating procedure? Questions like, who made the ultimate decisions?” Coard said. “It’s one thing to lose a box of remains. It’s another thing to intentiona­lly destroy a box of remains. Who does that?”

He called it the “ultimate desecratio­n.”

“Obviously it’s going to be someone they’re familiar with, but they want to know, hey, was this my mother, father, sister, brother, niece, nephew? Who was this?” Coard said.

Kenney said the remains had been kept in a storage room. The volume of remains was unclear, and Kenney said he hoped to determine where and how they were disposed of. The city has hired a law firm to investigat­e and has agreed to include lawyers for the victims’ families in the process.

Late Thursday, a crowd gathered at an intersecti­on near the block of Osage Avenue in West Philadelph­ia where the bombing happened.

Dressed all in white, MOVE members read a minute-by-minute account of the bombing and the confrontat­ion that led up to it: Philadelph­ia police, attempting to serve warrants on four members and evict the rest of the Black back-to-nature group from its headquarte­rs, dropped a bomb from a helicopter, igniting fuel for a generator stored on the roof.

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