Unlicensed mortician kept remains of 50 bodies in storage unit

  • Wanna Join? New users you can now register lightning fast using your Facebook or Twitter accounts.
Feb 2, 2006
6,400
3,294
113
#1
https://news.yahoo.com/officials-unlicensed-mortician-had-remains-50-170723566.html





An unlicensed funeral director accused of stealing more than $12,000 from an elderly couple could face more charges after authorities found 12 bodies and the cremated remains of more than 40 others in two self-storage units he rented, authorities said Friday.


Joseph O'Donnell, 55, of Boston, was being held on $10,000 bail in a larceny case when investigators found the cremated remains Wednesday at a Somerville self-storage business. On Thursday, they found 12 sets of human remains at a similar business in Weymouth.

Suffolk District Attorney Daniel Conley said no foul play is suspected and investigators were working to identify the remains.
Conley's spokesman, Jake Wark, said no charges have been sought against O'Donnell in the discovery of the human remains, but authorities are conducting a criminal investigation. O'Donnell's funeral director's license lapsed in 2008

His attorney, Paul Tomasetti, did not immediately return a call seeking comment. A message was left at his office.
O'Donnell was charged with larceny in April. Authorities said he took more than $12,000 in pre-payments from an elderly couple to cover two future funerals. Later, when the couple asked to apply one payment to another family member who had died, they learned that O'Donnell's funeral home had closed and O'Donnell was unable to return their money, investigators said.



The Public Storage facility where human remains linked to a Boston funeral director were found

Wark said the mere possession of cremated remains is not a crime. "But the presence of so many does give us some concern, given his alleged behavior in connection with the theft of funeral payments," he said.
The discovery of the bodies in Weymouth, Wark said, is "a much more serious set of circumstances."

O'Donnell had a previously scheduled pre-trial hearing in the larceny case Friday. He waived his appearance, and the case was continued until Aug. 29

April Hopkins, a Randolph woman who said she paid O'Donnell thousands of dollars to cremate her son, mother and granddaughter in 2011 and 2012, said she was angry when she heard about the cremated remains found in Somerville. She said she is now unsure whether the cremated remains she has in her house are those of her loved ones or not.

Hopkins went to Dorchester Municipal Court Friday to try to get more information about the remains found in the storage facilities.
"I'm devastated. I am very upset because I really put a lot of trust in this man," Hopkins said. "Is one of those bodies my mom? Is one of the bodies my son? Who's to say?"

Dahria Williams-Fernandes, a Boston funeral home director and member of the state Division of Professional Licensure's Board of Funeral Services and Embalming, said it's a violation of professional regulations to put bodies in self-storage units.

"It's clear-cut," she said. "There's no way we'd ever be placing an individual in a storage unit for any period of time. They should never be out of our possession."
 
Feb 2, 2006
6,400
3,294
113
#4
there was some serial killer in texas who buried bodies of at least 10 of his victims under his storage unit
 

S.SAVAGE

SICCNESS MOTHERFUCKER
Oct 25, 2011
7,638
88,992
0
113
EAST SAN JOSE
#8
https://news.yahoo.com/officials-unlicensed-mortician-had-remains-50-170723566.html





An unlicensed funeral director accused of stealing more than $12,000 from an elderly couple could face more charges after authorities found 12 bodies and the cremated remains of more than 40 others in two self-storage units he rented, authorities said Friday.


Joseph O'Donnell, 55, of Boston, was being held on $10,000 bail in a larceny case when investigators found the cremated remains Wednesday at a Somerville self-storage business. On Thursday, they found 12 sets of human remains at a similar business in Weymouth.

Suffolk District Attorney Daniel Conley said no foul play is suspected and investigators were working to identify the remains.
Conley's spokesman, Jake Wark, said no charges have been sought against O'Donnell in the discovery of the human remains, but authorities are conducting a criminal investigation. O'Donnell's funeral director's license lapsed in 2008

His attorney, Paul Tomasetti, did not immediately return a call seeking comment. A message was left at his office.
O'Donnell was charged with larceny in April. Authorities said he took more than $12,000 in pre-payments from an elderly couple to cover two future funerals. Later, when the couple asked to apply one payment to another family member who had died, they learned that O'Donnell's funeral home had closed and O'Donnell was unable to return their money, investigators said.



The Public Storage facility where human remains linked to a Boston funeral director were found

Wark said the mere possession of cremated remains is not a crime. "But the presence of so many does give us some concern, given his alleged behavior in connection with the theft of funeral payments," he said.
The discovery of the bodies in Weymouth, Wark said, is "a much more serious set of circumstances."

O'Donnell had a previously scheduled pre-trial hearing in the larceny case Friday. He waived his appearance, and the case was continued until Aug. 29

April Hopkins, a Randolph woman who said she paid O'Donnell thousands of dollars to cremate her son, mother and granddaughter in 2011 and 2012, said she was angry when she heard about the cremated remains found in Somerville. She said she is now unsure whether the cremated remains she has in her house are those of her loved ones or not.

Hopkins went to Dorchester Municipal Court Friday to try to get more information about the remains found in the storage facilities.
"I'm devastated. I am very upset because I really put a lot of trust in this man," Hopkins said. "Is one of those bodies my mom? Is one of the bodies my son? Who's to say?"

Dahria Williams-Fernandes, a Boston funeral home director and member of the state Division of Professional Licensure's Board of Funeral Services and Embalming, said it's a violation of professional regulations to put bodies in self-storage units.

"It's clear-cut," she said. "There's no way we'd ever be placing an individual in a storage unit for any period of time. They should never be out of our possession."

#FIXED
 
Apr 25, 2002
6,082
2,253
113
46
#9
"its a violation of proffesional regulations to put dead bodies in personal storage units"

lol. what the fuck are those storage places for then?
Living in.

www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2594224/Mom-allowed-two-sons-5-10-live-filthy-tiny-storage-unit-MONTH-gets-probation.html

Mom who allowed herself and two sons, 5 and 10, to live in a filthy tiny storage unit for a MONTH gets probation

• Sheena Johnson given probabtion after her sons were found living alone in 'horrible conditions' in a cramped storage unit after she was arrested
• The children, now aged six and 11, are still in protective custody
• Johnson, 28, told a court she had no other option

The mother of two children who were living periodically in a 5-by-10-foot unit at a New Jersey storage facility has been sentenced to probation.

The 28-year-old Ewing woman received 4 years' probation under an agreement in which she agreed to plead guilty to child abuse and contempt charges.

Johnson initially was charged with child endangerment after her sons, then ages 5 and 10, were found in the storage facility last April. Officers checked the facility after she was arrested for slashing her ex-boyfriend's tires.

Johnson thanked the judge for giving her a second chance.

Johnson, who is now trying to regain custody of the sons, said domestic conflict caused her to lose her job and then the roof over her head at a time when she was also dealing with one son’s severe ADHD.

'I am encouraged by your decisions and I think they are appropriate,' said Johnson, who appeared before the judge in a black suit with matching hose and heels. Johnson, who benefited from a community fund-raiser after her situation came to light, said she is now working with an agency trying to help other women in desperate situations.

Her children remain in foster care. She gets supervised visits with them and says she plans to regain custody as soon as possible.

She was found along with her two young children living in a filthy five-by-ten-foot storage unit in New Jersey.

Johnson told a court last May she was so desperate, she had no other choice but to move her sons into the sealed container with no running water or electricity.

The horrific discovery was made last April when Johnson was arrested for allegedly slashing her ex-boyfriend's tires.
That's when she confessed to officers that her boys were in the storage unit on their own.
Police found the children in deplorable conditions, sleeping on a bare mattress surrounded by garbage bags filled with clothes, a suitcase, a backpack and other items strewn around the locker.

Johnson explained to the court she was forced to move into the storage unit after losing her job in December 2012 and breaking up with her fiance due to domestic abuse.

She went to live with a relative who later pushed her out of the house and locked the door with her children inside during one argument, she told Mercer County Correction Center.
She had to call police to get the door open and she then took the children and their few possessions and went to a hotel.

After this, in February 2013, the family had been moving as transients from charity hotel to borrowed beds at friend’s houses, finding places to sleep for a few days at a time.
But as money ran low and she was denied more benefits from the county, she said she simply ran out of options.

The Homeless Hotline gave the family a room at the Mount’s Motel in Lawrence for three nights.

After that, the nights in the storage locker began.

'It really hit me so hard, that I’m down at about the tree-root’s-bottom, and what can I do to make my kids’ life better this way.

'I didn’t see any clarity — our only option was to stay where our stuff is.

'We all hugged and we all slept on the same mattress when we were there. We made it. I didn’t make it seem as if it was the worst situation ever.'

She said though it was cold, it wasn't freezing and she heaped blankets over the boys to keep them warm.

She would eat in fast-food restaurants for breakfast and the boys would brush their teeth and wash up there. Sometimes they stayed at a friend's house and were able to have showers or watch TV.
At the same time she was making sure her boys were going to school.

It was over this that she and her ex-fiance argued after she asked him to give the youngest son a ride to school that morning. When he refused, she got angry and slashed his tires.

Johnson had left the boys in the storage unit and told them she would be back soon.

It was the last time she saw them.

She also revealed in court that she has few friends in the area and grew up under drug-addicted parents. She was working by aged 14 and pregnant by 16.

A unit that size at the Ewing location costs up to $70 a month, according to its website.

A renter of another unit said he believed the family had been living there 'for months'.

There is no heat inside the units and only the hallways are wired for electricity, he said.

Flo Auletta, who owns a restaurant across the road from the storage company told the Trentonian that paramedics, code enforcement officials and social workers subsequently arrived on the scene.
Ewing Mayor Bert Steinmann told the paper that the discovery had left him 'shocked and appalled' and said he had called the town's two other storage companies to check there was nothing similar occurring.

'I just wished the mother would have sought help instead of going down the route she took,' he added.

'There’s Homefront, the County’s Board of Social Services, Women’s Space — anything would have been better.'
 

Attachments