Arrests in the Heaven Bound Case Are Only The Beginning of Justice for Families
For more than a year, Connecting Directors has followed the unraveling of the Maryland crematory scandal involving Heaven Bound Cremation Services. Last week, the story took a turn that many families have been waiting for, as the owners of this establishment were arrested, each charged with eight counts of improper disposal of human remains.
How we got here
Although the horrific conditions at Heaven Bound Cremation Services first made news in early 2025, these arrests were the culmination of several years of misconduct and suspicious behavior by owners Rosa Iyonna Williams and Brandon Angelo Williams, who opened the business in 2014. Almost immediately, complaints about improper dispositions began cropping up, leading to multiple probationary periods being placed on both the business and on co-owner Rosa Williams.
Williams’ noncompliance with the terms of her probation led the Maryland State Board of Morticians and Funeral Directors to begin a series of unannounced inspections of Heaven Bound. It was during one of these inspections in March 2024 that authorities discovered “human bodies in cardboard boxes stacked on top of each other with no support between the boxes; human bodies in ripped body bags with arms and legs hanging out of the body bags; human remains that were not stored at temperatures below 40F; and blood on the refrigeration unit and bodily fluids on the floor.”
Hidden at their home
A criminal investigation was launched in February 2025, where court-authorized searches of the business and the Williamses’ home found more than 200 sets of cremated remains and “numerous decomposing cadavers.” The state board revoked Heaven Bound’s operating license and began the heartbreaking process of identifying the bodies and notifying the families of their status.
Perhaps the most distressing aspect of this case is that of the eight counts cited in the arrest warrants that were issued on February 19 for Rosa and Brandon Williams, seven of those counts relate to fetuses and one to the remains of an approximately two-month-old infant. These remains were all located at the Williamses’ home — not at the Heaven Bound facility.
The Williamses were finally arrested on February 20, 2026 and were released after each posted a $20,000 unsecured personal bond. Their trial is expected to begin on April 7.
The aftermath
For those who have followed this case from the beginning, the criminal charges confirm that the deplorable conditions at Heaven Bound that were reported by families and actually noted by state inspectors from its first years in operation clearly constituted criminal conduct. So why the delay in bringing justice for the families who may have fallen victim to the Williamses’ pattern of neglect and greed?
As Connecting Directors reported in February 2025, Maryland governor Wes Moore publicly condemned the situation as “despicable” and ordered a review of the Maryland State Board of Morticians and Funeral Directors immediately after Heaven Bound was shuttered. Several board members resigned as testimony revealed their own culpability, which included inspection backlogs and gaps in oversight.
Gov. Moore’s overhaul has resulted not only in new board membership but also “significant administrative improvements” including a fully online licensing and inspection system and increased communication with health departments and biweekly Complaint Committee meetings to address complaints in a timely manner.
Thanks to these efforts, since the Heaven Bound scandal broke in February 2025, the board has cleared more than 300 backlogged inspections that were supposed to take place every two years.
More than criminal court
As both Rosa and Brandon Williams were each charged with eight violations of the Maryland General Health Article §5-514, unauthorized disposal of a body, they could face prison time and/or thousands of dollars in fines.
Even so, the grieving families that were impacted by the Williamses’ actions aren’t going to let the couple off with only the punishment by criminal means. More than two dozen lawsuits have been filed in Charles County, Maryland Circuit Court against the crematory and related entities.



