USA: Four men are charged in New York for illegally harvesting body parts of corpses brought to a funeral home and selling them to be translanted.
Record ID:
583597
USA: Four men are charged in New York for illegally harvesting body parts of corpses brought to a funeral home and selling them to be translanted.
- Title: USA: Four men are charged in New York for illegally harvesting body parts of corpses brought to a funeral home and selling them to be translanted.
- Date: 24th February 2006
- Summary: (BN03) BROOKLYN, NEW YORK, UNITED STATES (FEBRUARY 23, 2006) (REUTERS) KINGS COUNTY (IN BROOKLYN) DISTRICT ATTORNEY CHARLES J. HYNES WALKING INTO THE PRESS CONFERENCE PODIUM
- Embargoed: 11th March 2006 12:00
- Keywords:
- Location: Usa
- Country: USA
- Topics: Crime / Law Enforcement
- Reuters ID: LVA2U9SVVDHDC6LH695SWY91HDMF
- Story Text: New York authorities on Thursday (February 23) charged four men with
illegally harvesting and selling tissue from 1,077 dead people in the past
four years, including the remains of British broadcaster Alistair Cooke.
"Frequently the defendants principally led by Mastromarino and
Nicelli, would misstate the cause of death as well as the age of the deceased.
For example, the well respected host of "Masterpiece Theatre"
Alistair Cooke, had his tissue removed and Mastromarino and Nicelli listed his
age at eighty-five and the cause of death as heart attack. In fact Mr. Cooke
was ninety-five years of age and the cause of death was lung cancer,"
said Kings County (in Brooklyn) District Attorney, CHarles J. Hynes.
The accused, Dr. Michael Mastromarino, chief executive of a company
that sold human tissue for medical implants, Biomedical Tissue Services,
Daniel George and Sons funeral home owner Joseph Nicelli and Lee Crucetta and
Christopher Aldorasi, were indicted on charges including conspiracy, unlawful
dissection and forgery.
Prosecutors said the men, working with the Brooklyn funeral home, got
bones and organs from the bodies of people who were not organ donors. The
tissue was then sold via legitimate medical channels for use in procedures
like hip replacements.
Many of the deceased would have been ineligible as donors due to
illness or age, including Cooke, a longtime host of the U.S. TV program
"Masterpiece Theater" and known for his Letter from America BBC
broadcasts, who died in 2004.
After recently losing his father, Thomas Dumaine, to bladder cancer,
Brooklyn resident Anthony Dumaine discovered to his horror that his father's
body had been violated and bones removed, allegedly by the accused.
He explained, "I went to go see, to a funeral home at Daniel
George to have him laid out and basically what I thought was going to be
saying goodbye to my father didn't turn out that way. They had to exhume him
again."
During a 15-month investigation which included the exhumation of six
bodies, authorities discovered that after removing bones, the men had replaced
them with plastic pipes to maintain an intact appearance. In some cases, they
also left gloves, aprons and other things in the bodies.
The police officer who first broke the case, detective Patricia
O'Brien, began her investigation after a complaint from the new funeral home
owner that the previous owner of Daniel George & Sons funeral home had
absconded with funds.
"The detective (Patricia O'Brien) learned that bodies from the
embalming room on the floor below would be hoisted on a mechanical lift to the
surgery, where they would be harvested for their spines, legs and arm bones,
tendons and other body parts," New York Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly
told a news conference.
Between thirty and forty funeral homes are believed to have been
involved in the racket and the removed parts were sold throughout the country
for use in medical procedures. The most serious charge on the 122-count
indictment, of enterprise corruption, carried a possible 25-year sentence.
Said Chad Siegel, Lee Crucetta's attorney, "The district
attorney's office knows we're ready to go forward completely and bring this to
a trial and to a jury, who can look at this impartially. And I'm confident
that after they hear all the evidence in this case they will agree with us
that Mr. Crucetta did absolutely nothing wrong and acquit him."
The harvested tissues were sold by Mastromarino's Fort Lee, New
Jersey-based company, Biomedical Tissue Services Ltd., which was ordered to
cease operations last month by the Food and Drug Administration. At least
three companies that bought materials from Biomedical Tissue Services have
issued recall notices of some of their products in recent months.
Hynes said the four men made at least 2 million U.S. dollars (USD)
through the scheme.
Transplanting of tissues such as muscle, skin and bone is common in the
United States and the trade in implantable body parts is legal, providing that
certain conditions are met.
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