Workable Solutions & Arm Funerals | 4M #175
Welcome to the hundred-and-seventy-fifth edition of Morticians’ Monday Morning Mashup, 4M #175, where we’ll serve up bite-sized, easily-digestible nuggets of the deathcare news you need to crush conversations in the week ahead. Bon appetit!
Unclaimed ultimatum
The U.S. isn’t the only country with an unclaimed cremated remains problem; authorities in the UK estimate that more than 300,000 sets of remains are sitting on undertakers’ shelves — and they’re ready to do something about it. The country’s Law Commission has proposed what they call a “workable solution”: let families know that if they don’t pick up the remains of their loved ones within four weeks, the funeral home will respectfully dispose of them. The National Association of Funeral Directors, though, believes four weeks is not long enough and is pushing for an eight-week deadline. Either way, they look forward to having a uniform, nationwide rule to follow.
Farewell to arm
A video of a young woman’s funeral for her amputated arm, which she recently lost to a rare form of cancer, has gone viral — and for good reason. USAToday shared Eldiara Doucette’s unique story of finding out that her arm had only five days to “live,” documenting her short journey through several of the stages of grief. A local mortuary embalmed her arm and assisted with the open-casket memorial, the video of which has garnered tens of millions of views on Instagram and TikTok. The images above are screenshots from the USAToday piece.
That’s one View
Last week, as the outspoken hosts of The View criticized the country’s Congress members, Joy Behar shared this nugget of knowledge: “I understand why these congresspeople bend over backward for Trump because they don’t want to go back to their jobs as exterminators and undertakers.” Just gonna leave that one here for you.
Stepping down
Four members of the all-volunteer Maryland Board of Morticians and Funeral Directors have stepped down — at the governor’s request — after years of complaints and egregious issues led to the shutdown of Heaven Bound Cremation Services in late January. Governor Wes Moore also ordered a “top-to-bottom operational review” of the board, to “help ensure that the critical licensing and oversight board is fulfilling its responsibility to uphold integrity, promote trust, safeguard the health and safety of all Marylanders.” The owners of Heaven Bound are being investigated following a mid-January inspection that identified 11 major problems, including a body that had been noted as being present in a March 2024 inspection.
Dirty deed
A woman hired to clean a Pittsburgh funeral home helped herself to nearly $200,000 in stolen funds after hours while she had open access to the owner’s office. The owner found out about the theft when his bank notified him that $194,000 in checks had been written to the woman and deposited into her account. She’s been charged with felony theft and fraud.