Prosecuting the Dead

Funeral Industry News December 2, 2025
Court

Prosecuting the Dead

Posthumous prosecutions! We’re such a litigious people it’s almost believable of 2025 America, but no: this is another one of those incredible feats of folly that history holds in such abundance.

We do still have some present-day posthumous court activity, to be sure — exonerations and pardonings happen even today, mostly for the sake of families and survivors, often for the purposes of clearing someone’s name or clarifying estate matters.

One of the most famous examples of trial of a corpse is that of Joan of Arc in 1431, who was burned at the stake for heresy. A “nullification trial” cleared her name of any wrongdoing. Jim Morrison of The Doors was pardoned by the State of Florida in 2010, almost 40 years after his 1971 death in a move seen by family and some surviving bandmates as no less politically motivated.

But what of the extreme position of taking a corpse — fresh or otherwise — to trial, setting them upright as witnesses, and convicting them of this or that, then punishing the decomposing remains?

Once upon a benighted time, yes, it happened.

The cadaver synod

Trials of the dead where the corpse was found guilty and punishment imposed were typically politically or religiously motivated. If found guilty, penalties were often bizarre and severe; extreme fines, for example, and in at least one case, partial dismemberment.

Courts tried corpses to confiscate estates, destroy legacy and name, or impose a verdict that couldn’t stick when the “convicted” were alive.

An especially infamous example is Cadaver Synod of the late ninth century. 9 months after his death, Pope Formosus’s rotting corpse was exhumed, dressed in vestment robes, propped n a papal chair in Rome, and made to “answer” for his crimes, a debacle that has been called “political theater.” Found guilty, had his status as Pope revoked, and the three fingers used in blessings amputated. His remains were tossed into the Tiber River.

The year was 897.

Exhumation and legal issues

Exhumation is the main channel by which the bodily involvement of the departed in our legal system happens in the 21st century.

For death-care professionals, the implications are legal and practical: exhumation orders can arrive with little notice; there can be reams of paperwork and a strict chain-of-custody requirement. Handling procedures are documented. Transport to forensic labs happens within regulations, by certified means. Logistics become more involved for fragile remains, those interred in a family plot, and the embalmed. There may be elaborate coordination necessary as you juggle cemetery managers, forensics officials, procedures, and the needs of affected family all while preserving the dignity of the deceased.

Today’s dead may not be litigants in the modern sense, but bodies are still often the most important evidence in legal proceedings… they just don’t take the stand anymore.