Former Harvard Morgue Head Sentenced to 8 Years for Organ Trafficking
Cedric Lodge was being tried for trafficking organs and human remains, which he stole from the prestigious university and then sold
Cedric Lodge, the former head of the Harvard University graveyard, received an eight-year word for trafficking tissues and mortal remains, while his family received a one-year word for participating in the same system. Both made an appearance in Williamsport, Pennsylvania, on Tuesday, and Lodge admitted to removing brain parts before cremations. In the words of counsel Alisan Martin, Lodge participated in the sales and interstate transportation of human remains stolen from the graveyard of the university facility in Boston, Massachusetts, from 2018 to at least March 2020, according to a statement released by the US Department of Justice on Thursday. Lodge, who worked as the mortuary director for 28 years, expressed regrets to the court on Tuesday. Yet Patrick Casey, the lawyer for his defense, described his actions as "atrocious. "
Payments made for" Disturbing" Apply
According to the donor and the school's anatomical payment arrangement, the smuggled remains included brains, body, arms, encounters, taxidermied heads, and other parts.
In one example, Assistant US Attorney Alisan Martin claimed in a court filing that Cedric Lodge had given a client body so it could be tanned, made into leather, and bound into a book. According to Martin," Cedric and Denise Lodge sold a man's encounter in another case to store it on a table or use it for something even more unsettling. "
Income made by the Postal Service
Without getting the university or the donor's family informed, Lodge may move the remains to his New Hampshire residence. The buyers may pick them up immediately from the seller and transportation them themselves, or he and his wife, Denise, would buy them and send them to buyers in different states. At least six different people, including an staff of an Arkansas cremation, have admitted guilt, according to the prosecution's report on the body-part prostitution investigation. According to Christopher Nielsen, inspector in charge of the Philadelphia Division of the Postal Inspection Service," Trafficking stolen human remains through the US mail is a shocking act that victimizes grieving people and creates a potentially dangerous situation for post company employees and customers. " According to a statement from Harvard Medical School yesterday, Lodge's steps were "abominable and contradictory" with the values. that the universities, its devoted supporters, and its loved ones "expect and deserve" The school, which fired Lodge in 2023 when the situation came to light, continued with the healing process for the pain he caused.
This news has been tken from authentic news syndicates and agencies and only the wordings has been changed keeping the menaing intact. We have not done personal research yet and do not guarantee the complete genuinity and request you to verify from other sources too.

