Missouri Family Files Lawsuit After Funeral Home Returns Loved One's Brain in a Cardboard Box

Missouri Family Files Lawsuit After Funeral Home Returns Loved One's Brain in a Cardboard Box
A Missouri family has filed a lawsuit against a local funeral home, claiming they were traumatized after opening an unusual cardboard box accompanying the cremated remains of the late Fred Love Jr.According to NBC News, the lawsuit was filed this past October in the Circuit Court of St. Louis City. In their complaint, the family recalls how, after Love’s death in 2022, they traveled to Simpson Funeral Home in Springfield to retrieve Love’s ashes and clothing. They were given an urn, as well as a cardboard box that purportedly contained Love’s entire brain.Love’s stepdaughter, who opened the box, said that she still suffers severe headaches after being exposed to a toxic embalming chemical used on the brain.Attorneys for the family have since suggested that Love’s remains were repeatedly mishandled, to the point that his relatives realized something was wrong as soon as they arrived at the Simpson Funeral Home’s chapel for an open-casket service on October 3, 2022.Love, adds NBC News, had passed away just over a week earlier, having suffered a sudden collapse at his Missouri home.One of Love’s stepchildren had, for instance, noticed that skin “was a bruised purple color,” which the lawsuit attributes to “poor embalming practices.”“Further, certain rods used during tissue donation, which are to be removed after the donation and before presentation of a body during a funerary service, were negligently and recklessly left in the body of the decedent and presented to the family,” the complaint states. “These rods created an unnatural and rigid appearance to an already poorly handled embalming presentation.”The family was already upset that the American flag draped over Love’s casket was “wrinkled and unpressed,” unfitting for a man who “was a veteran of the United States Armed Forces, and retired from the military with the rank of Captain.”
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Sources
Funeral home gives family their loved one’s brain in a box ‘by mistake,’ suit says Missouri funeral home gave family their loved one's brain in cardboard box, lawsuit saysPetition No. 2322-CC09382 in the Circuit Court of St. Louis City
About Ryan J. Farrick
Ryan Farrick is a freelance writer and small business advertising consultant based out of mid-Michigan. Passionate about international politics and world affairs, he’s an avid traveler with a keen interest in the connections between South Asia and the United States. Ryan studied neuroscience and has spent the last several years working as an operations manager in transportation logistics.