Chattanooga Times Free Press

Morgue manager sued for alleged theft of organs

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BOSTON — The son of a woman whose body was donated to Harvard Medical School for research purposes filed a classactio­n lawsuit Friday on behalf of all families who believe their loved ones’ body parts were mishandled by the school’s former morgue manager.

The lawsuit filed in Suffolk Superior Court in Boston said the class could include the families of up to 400 donated cadavers. It alleges negligence, breach of duty and infliction of emotional distress.

Before Adele Mazzone died in February 2019, she arranged to donate her body to the medical school for research, according to the lawsuit. Her ashes were returned to her family in April 2021, but her son, John Bozek, of Tewksbury, Massachuse­tts, thinks his mother’s body was one of those desecrated at the morgue.

“Plaintiff brings this class action on behalf of himself and all other similarly situated individual­s whose family members donated and entrusted their deceased bodies into Harvard’s custody for medical research and academic study and whose cadavers were then mishandled, dissected, and/or sold by the HMS morgue manager,” the suit says.

A Harvard spokespers­on said via email that the university had no comment on the lawsuit.

When someone loses a loved one, “sometimes the only thing they can latch onto, is that their loved ones’ remains are going to be used for an important scientific purpose,” Jeff Catalano, a partner at Keches Law Group, which is representi­ng Bozek, said in a statement.

Harvard owed a duty of care to the families who entrusted the school with custody of their loved ones’ donated bodies, Catalano said.

“Medical schools like Harvard have a duty to ensure donated remains are handled properly and with decency and to ensure they are used for their intended purpose of scientific study,” he said.

 ?? STEVEN PORTER/THE BOSTON GLOBE VIA AP ?? Denise Lodge, left, covers her face with a printout of the indictment against her as she walks Wednesday from the federal courthouse in Concord, N.H., following her arrest.
STEVEN PORTER/THE BOSTON GLOBE VIA AP Denise Lodge, left, covers her face with a printout of the indictment against her as she walks Wednesday from the federal courthouse in Concord, N.H., following her arrest.

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