The Morning Call

Pa. coroners turn to social media for clues about unclaimed dead

- By Jo Ciavaglia

The names of more than 100 unclaimed dead in Montgomery County had been public for one week when the first call came in.

A friend of a Pottstown woman who was murdered in 2014 reached out. She connected the coroner’s office with the woman’s daughter, who has expressed interest in collecting the ashes, he said.

More recently, a mother who wanted to claim the fetal remains of her child also contacted the office.

Montgomery County is among a growing number of Pennsylvan­ia coroner and medical examiner offices going public with what once had been a private effort: Tracking down family members of the dead.

Those offices have long used different methods for identifyin­g next of kin, including law enforcemen­t-only databases, and more recently, the Internet and genealogy websites. In recent years, more have started releasing personal informatio­n about the dead to generate leads about their family.

Montgomery County is among the counties where the coroner’s office is reopening old unclaimed files and reaching out to family again, years later. Frequently, family is located at the time of death, but cannot, or will not, claim a body, according to coroners.

In Chester County, Coroner Dr. Christina VandePol recently posted notices on Facebook and with local media ahead of the second interment service for unclaimed remains of nonveteran­s.

The “final call” notice included the names of the dead, their ages and last known residence, along with a contact number for the coroner’s office. The ashes of two of the 28 individual­s were claimed as a result of the posting, VandePol said.

The Luzerne County coroner’s office has been criticized over the last year, most recently in February, by families who claim the office failed to notify them about a death before burying the remains in a potter’s field.

Coroner Francis Hacken, who took over last October, is working to enhance the office’s abilities to locate and notify next of kin, according to media reports. The plans include listing the names and other informatio­n about unclaimed deceased on the county website, Hacken said.

“At the present time we are not using social media for the location of next of kin in unclaimed bodies, but we do plan an initiative in this area,” Hacken said in an email. “We do recognize the benefits of social media.”

When she took over as Bucks County coroner in January, Meredith Buck said she had to create a formal system for identifyin­g next of kin. In recent memory, the county has not made public efforts to gather next-of-kin informatio­n.

“Unfortunat­ely, it is unclear as to what measures may or may not have been taken to locate next of kin prior to me taking office, given that my predecesso­r did not pass on this informatio­n,” Buck said in an email.

Bucks County has more than 200 unclaimed dead dating to at least 1999 stored at the morgue in Warminster, according to county data.

Buck called social media an “invaluable” resource for tracking down leads to family connection­s with unclaimed dead. She is also compiling a list of unclaimed dead and plans to follow Montgomery County’s

lead and post it on the county’s website, which is being updated.

Montgomery County’s decision to post the names and other details about unclaimed dead in its possession is its latest attempt to remove them from the rolls. The public list will be updated several times a year, First Deputy Coroner Alexander Balacki said.

Since last year, 13 adults and 12 fetal remains have been interred or otherwise returned to family

since Montgomery County began enhancing its family identifica­tion efforts, Balacki said.

Montgomery County has the remains of 124 unclaimed dead including 22 new cases this year as of Oct. 29. A little more than half are considered abandoned.

President of the Pennsylvan­ia Coroners Associatio­n Charles Kiessling Jr., who is the Lycoming County coroner, recently started posting requests for next-of-kin informatio­n on

his office’s Facebook page.

His inspiratio­n was the Indiana State Coroners Associatio­n, which encouraged members to use social media to reach a wider audience, especially in mediums with the ability to share a post with others.

So far, it’s been one of his most successful methods, Kiessling said.

Recently he posted a message looking for help tracking down the family of a recently deceased

woman.

Within hours, the wife of a Pennsylvan­ia state trooper saw it, and recognized the name as her husband’s cousin. The trooper connected Kiessling with informatio­n for the woman’s brother, who made arrangemen­ts to retrieve her body.

“It’s amazing how social media is faster,” Kiessling added. “Social media has saved us a boatload of time.”

 ?? DAVID SWANSON/PHILADELPH­IAINQUIRER ?? Coroner Dr. Christina VandePol, seated, and manager Patty Emmons recently posted notices on Facebook and with local media ahead of the second interment service for unclaimed remains of nonveteran­s.
DAVID SWANSON/PHILADELPH­IAINQUIRER Coroner Dr. Christina VandePol, seated, and manager Patty Emmons recently posted notices on Facebook and with local media ahead of the second interment service for unclaimed remains of nonveteran­s.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States