PICS OF DAY

PICS OF DAY
Michael Jackson, 'Harry Potter'

°

Homepage / Irresistible News
Text Size

Son Finds Exposed Coffins At Chicago Cemetery

POSTED: Monday, May 9, 2005
UPDATED: 8:10 am EDT May 10, 2005

A man visiting his mother's grave at a Chicago cemetery said he found deplorable conditions.


Slideshow: Son: "I'm Seeing Coffins Opened"


"I run up on stuff like these here -- coffins pushed up to the side, all open, foul odors coming out," said Sidney Clark. "I'm seeing coffins open, I'm seeing a lot of dirt that has been moved -- the coffins are not even 3 feet in the ground."

Staff from WMAQ-TV in Chicago saw at least three wooden coffins sticking out of the dirt at Homewood Memorial Gardens, with the plastic-shrouded bodies visible inside. They reported that concrete burial vaults were clearly exposed as well.

On the ground on a hilltop, there were dozens of grave markers askew and stacked in rows. Clark said for three years, he's been trying to find his mother's grave, to no avail.

"If she was living, if she could talk to me now, she'd be glad I'm doing this right here," he said.

A representative of the cemetery tried to show Clark the approximate spot where his mother is buried, Rogers reported, but the grave was not marked.

As for the exposed coffins, maintenance man Rudy Casillas said he's in the process of layering the area where Cook County morgue bodies are buried in pauper's graves. He said after that, the grave markers will be restored to the ground above. Casillas also maintained that the coffins have only been exposed during that process.

"See, this is just erosion," Casillas said. "We have coyotes that come and just dig -- animals and stuff like that."

When Rogers asked if the three coffins he saw sticking out of the ground were buried, Casillas answered that they were.

Cook County Medical Examiner Edmund Donoghue, whose office buries about 30 people a month at Homewood Gardens, said he will send a representative to inspect what Rogers found. Clark's sister said she has retained a lawyer and wants her mother's body exhumed to determine exactly where it is.

The cemetery assured Clark that his mother is not in the area where the graves were found exposed, but Clark said he is not convinced.

"I think they are wrong -- totally wrong," Clark said, adding that he thinks his mother is buried in the area where the coffins were exposed.

Sponsored Links

Links We Like
Sponsored Content
There is no absolute number of drinks per day that defines alcoholism. Learn the behavior and body reactions that constitute alcoholism. More

In today's real estate market, it takes more to attract buyers, and frustrated home sellers are resorting to some unusual methods to get their homes noticed. More

Don’t ruin your chances of landing that new job by making easy to correct mistakes on your cover letter. More

You’ve just tied the knot with that special someone, now it’s time to think about the future. Find out why term life insurance is important to have once you’re married. More

Most Popular

Marketplace