A Texas family believed their mother's ashes were buried in the family's plot in Oklahoma, until an FBI investigation unveiled that her body parts were sol
A Dallas family says they learned their mother's ashes may not truly be hers, following an investigation into the sale of body parts in Colorado.
Kayla Lyons lost her mother Doris in February 2017 and made sure she had a loving goodbye.
"There was always that comfort knowing that she was there," said Lyons.
At least, that's what she believed for the past 14 months.
"Now to find out that I can't go and talk to my mom, because it's probably not even her!" Lyons said.
Kayla
Lyons mother Doris Cox died in February 2017 after suffering
complications following a fall on a trip to Colorado. Then family
arranged to have her body cremated at a funeral home outside of Durango,
Colo.
"He said, 'Don't worry, we'll take really
good care of your mom. She's in great hands,'" said Lyons. "'We'll be
really gentle with her.'"
Last Thursday an agent
with the FBI in Grand Junction, Colo., called to inform her that her
mother's body parts were sold without the family's consent.
"He
identified himself as an agent of the FBI in Grand Junction [CO], and
he asked if I had signed any type of paperwork authorizing her body to
be donated, and I said 'Absolutely not.'" said Lyons. "That's when he
told me 'I regret to inform you we have receipts showing where your
mom's body parts have been sold.'"
Lyons
says she learned her mother, who had lived in the Dallas-area, was
cremated at a different facility, Sunset Mesa Funeral Directors, in the
town of Montrose, several hours north of Durango.
The Montrose Daily Press reports
the business was owned by Megan Hess. Hess also ran a legal business
selling body parts for medical research called Donor Services, Inc. in
the same building. Last year, employees told Reuters News Hess would not always tell people their loved one's bodies would be sold for profit. It was also reported Hess sold the gold teeth of the dead among other gruesome actions.
The
FBI began an investigation and raided the building on Feb. 6. The state
of Colorado suspended Sunset Mesa's licenses as a funeral home and
crematorium Feb. 12. That brings us to Thursday, when Lyons learned her
mother may not be where she thinks.
"I don't know if she's got a leg there, an arm there, a torso, you know...I don't know what happened to her," she sai
d.
Body
donation is an unregulated industry. Lyons hopes by sharing her story,
that changes. She is calling for more oversight and legislation on a
business that has largely operated in the shadows. Lyons hope in
speaking out is that no other daughter has to wonder who or what is in
her mother's grave.
"I want no one ever to have to do that," said Lyons. "No one needs that phone call."
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