Body Parts From Harvard Morgue Had Buyers With Ties To Facebook Oddities Group

Update: 

Bloomberg shared more details about stolen body parts from Harvard Medical School's morgue. The report provides details on the buyers and their connections to private Facebook groups. 

"Just out of curiosity, would you know anyone in the market for a fully intact embalmed brain?" Little Rock, Arkansas, funeral home contractor Candace Chapman Scott asked accused dealer Jeremy Pauley in Pennsylvania on a Facebook Messenger note in 2021, federal prosecutors say.

body parts from harvard morgue had buyers with ties to facebook oddities group
Jeremy Pauley

Cedric Lodge, 55, the former manager of Harvard's morgue, was charged with selling brains, hearts, skin, and other body parts to individuals who were part of an online underground human remains trafficking network

Seven people in five states, including Lodge, were charged with conspiracy and interstate transport of stolen goods by the US Attorney's office in Scranton, Pennsylvania. So far, Pauley has agreed to plead guilty.

Charging documents said Scott and Pauley were members of several Facebook groups that were platforms for buying and selling "oddities." 

Harvard fired Lodge in May for stealing and selling body parts from the morgue. At one point, he allowed Katrina MacLean and Joshua Taylor of Pennsylvania, an alleged trafficker, into the school's morgue. 

Lodge's wife was accused of selling body parts to MacLean and Taylor. Taylor appears to have made 39 PayPal payments to Lodge's wife, totaling $37,000 between 2018 and 2021. In one payment to Lodge's wife, he wrote in the memo "braiiiiiins." Another payment was billed as "head number 7." 

The indictment said MacLean and Taylor were accused of shipping body parts to Pauley, who MacLean asked to turn human skin into leather. 

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A former morgue manager at Harvard Medical School was indicted on federal charges for stealing body parts of donated cadavers and reselling them to individuals in a nationwide human-remains trafficking scheme. 

Cedric Lodge worked at the medical school's morgue in Boston. He allowed buyers into the school's morgue to create a shopping list of body parts, able to choose from skin, brains, heads, and bones, according to the five-count indictment filed Tuesday in US District Court for the Middle District of Pennsylvania.

body parts from harvard morgue had buyers with ties to facebook oddities group

Lodge "stole dissected portions of donated cadavers, including…heads, brains, skin, bones, and other human remains, without the knowledge or permission of (the school) and removed those remains from the morgue in Massachusetts and transported them to his residence in New Hampshire," the indictment said. 

"Some crimes defy understanding," United States Attorney Gerard M. Karam wrote in a statement. 

Karam continued: "The theft and trafficking of human remains strikes at the very essence of what makes us human. It is particularly egregious that so many of the victims here volunteered to allow their remains to be used to educate medical professionals and advance the interests of science and healing. For them and their families to be taken advantage of in the name of profit is appalling. With these charges, we are seeking to secure some measure of justice for all these victims." 

The indictment alleges Lodge and his wife, Denise, sold body parts to others, including Katrina Maclean and Joshua Taylor. 

Maclean owns Kat's Creepy Creations, a store in Peabody, Massachusetts, where the indictment says she sold the stolen body parts to others. 

Investigators claim Maclean asked Lodge for human skin so a mortuary and crematorium employee in Little Rock, Arkansas, could tan the skin to create leather.  

Harvard University officials said: 

"We are appalled to learn that something so disturbing could happen on our campus — a community dedicated to healing and serving others." 

The medical school said they're working with federal authorities "to attempt to identify victims and contact as many of the victims' families affected by this case as possible." 

Authored by Tyler Durden via ZeroHedge June 17th 2023