The Denver Post

Owners apparently sought to cover up money problems

SCHOOL ENROLLMENT DOWN THREE OF LAST FOUR YEARS

- By Colleen Slevin and Matthew Brown

Two Colorado funeral home owners apparently sought to cover up their financial difficulti­es by abandoning nearly 200 bodies that they had agreed to cremate or bury, instead storing the remains in a neglected building in many cases for years, a Colorado judge said Wednesday as he ruled that the criminal case against one of the defendants can go to trial.

Judge William Moller cited evidence from prosecutor­s in deciding that Return to Nature Funeral Home co-owner Carie Hallford can face trial on 260 counts of corpse abuse, money laundering, forgery and theft.

At the request of her attorney, the judge also sharply reduced Hallford’s bond, from $2 million to $100,000, increasing the chances that she can get out of jail while the trial is pending. Moller said the crimes the Hallfords are accused of were not violent in nature and noted that Carie Hallford had no prior criminal record.

Her husband — funeral home co-owner Jon Hallford — remains in custody in the El Paso County jail after his bond was previously reduced to $100,000, jail records show.

“The behavior of the Hallfords was designed to prevent the discovery of the bodies,” Moller said.

In the months leading up to the discovery of the bodies in early October after neighbors of the funeral home noticed a foul odor, the Hallfords missed tax payments, were evicted from one of their properties and were sued for unpaid bills by a crematory that had quit doing business with them, according to public records and interviews with people who worked with the couple.

Police in November arrested the Hallfords in Oklahoma after they allegedly fled Colorado to avoid prosecutio­n.

Prosecutor­s have not detailed a motive, and a law enforcemen­t affidavit detailing the allegation­s against the couple remains sealed by the court.

However, during a hearing last week, FBI agent Andrew Cohen testified about the gruesome conditions at the building in Penrose, where the decomposin­g bodies were found last year stored at room temperatur­e and stacked on top of one another. Flies and maggots were found throughout the building, he said.

Prosecutor­s also revealed text messages sent between the Hallfords showing they were under growing financial pressures and had fears that they would be caught for mishandlin­g the bodies. As the bodies accumulate­d, Jon Hallford even suggested getting rid of them by digging a big hole and treating them with lye or setting them on fire, according to the texts presented by the prosecutio­n.

 ?? HELEN H. RICHARDSON — THE DENVER POST ?? Allakassou­me Diallo, 12, studies on his computer in a math interventi­on class that is meeting in the library because the school is running out of rooms for classes at Place Bridge Academy in Denver on Nov. 14.
HELEN H. RICHARDSON — THE DENVER POST Allakassou­me Diallo, 12, studies on his computer in a math interventi­on class that is meeting in the library because the school is running out of rooms for classes at Place Bridge Academy in Denver on Nov. 14.

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