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Funeralgate Company hid Katrina dead in 10 weeks! Now closing 17M morgue [View All]

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goodboy Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Feb-16-06 02:03 PM
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Funeralgate Company hid Katrina dead in 10 weeks! Now closing 17M morgue
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Following a no-bid contract, wholly-owned subsidiary of SCI, (funeralgate)Kenyon Co. have done such a great job hiding (i.e. desecrating) the dead in NOLA from Hurricane Katrina, that they're closing down a 17million dollar taxpayer funded morgue in just 10 weeks!

Morgue for Katrina shuts down
By Shaila Dewan The New York Times

WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 2006


CARVILLE, Louisiana After using it for only 10 weeks, the Federal Emergency Management Agency has shut down a $17 million state-of-the-art morgue built to handle victims of Hurricane Katrina, according to agency officials.

The morgue, which can decontaminate and examine 150 bodies a day and has living space for nearly 500 workers, is closing because the number of bodies coming in has dwindled to about one a week, said Chuck Smith, a FEMA official.

Smith said Tuesday the morgue had been developed when officials believed there would be 5,000 deaths. Instead, there have been about 1,300 in Louisiana so far and it was apparent within a few weeks of the hurricane that the number of deaths would be 1,000 to 2,000.

"It is the Taj Mahal of forensic science; it is a beautiful place," said Frank Minyard, the New Orleans coroner. "But by the time we moved there we were finished with all the autopsies."

The shutdown began over the past weekend, when the morgue accepted its last body, found in the Ninth Ward in New Orleans.

FEMA has begun removing the equipment in the morgue and putting it in storage in preparation for the next disaster with high casualties.

State and local officials say they would have preferred that the federal government leave the equipment for their use, expressing concern that dozens of bodies remain to be found in the debris and damaged houses from the storm. Although state officials signed off on the morgue's disassembly in December, Louis Cataldie, the state emergency medical director, said that he thought the plan was flexible, and that the facility would still be usable after FEMA was gone.

But Smith said the federal agency's role had ended.

"Our mission is to support the state and local governments," said Smith, the incident commander of the Disaster Mortuary Operational Response Team at the Carville site. "When we get to the point where they're no longer overwhelmed, it's time for us to go."

The team, known as D-Mort, is a part of FEMA. After Hurricane Katrina, it was given the job of helping to identify storm victims.

Of the 910 bodies that were examined by D-Mort, all but 95 have been identified. About 100 have been identified but their families have not been located, or they have yet to be picked up by funeral homes.

Among D-Mort's last actions will be to transfer the remaining bodies to New Orleans, where officials are planning to build a mausoleum. Bodies that are identified, in some cases by DNA testing, could be disinterred in the future, officials said. The morgue also examined 610 bodies washed out of cemeteries after the flooding caused by Hurricanes Katrina and Rita and put them in new coffins, officials said.

The Orleans Parish morgue was destroyed in the storm, and Minyard, the coroner, said he hoped to sign a lease on an unused funeral home at the end of this week. FEMA will pay to replace equipment he already had, but neither he nor the state had a dental X-ray machine or the software that compares dental records, all of which will be removed from the Carville morgue. Nearly 400 identifications have been made using dental records.

No one seemed to know what would happen to the 70,000-square-foot, or 6,500-square-meter, building that housed the morgue, built from the ground up on private land belonging to Bear Industries, a construction supply company.

In addition to the morgue, a warehouse, and rows of never-used cubicles, it included a cafeteria and fitness center.

CARVILLE, Louisiana After using it for only 10 weeks, the Federal Emergency Management Agency has shut down a $17 million state-of-the-art morgue built to handle victims of Hurricane Katrina, according to agency officials.

The morgue, which can decontaminate and examine 150 bodies a day and has living space for nearly 500 workers, is closing because the number of bodies coming in has dwindled to about one a week, said Chuck Smith, a FEMA official.

Smith said Tuesday the morgue had been developed when officials believed there would be 5,000 deaths. Instead, there have been about 1,300 in Louisiana so far and it was apparent within a few weeks of the hurricane that the number of deaths would be 1,000 to 2,000.

"It is the Taj Mahal of forensic science; it is a beautiful place," said Frank Minyard, the New Orleans coroner. "But by the time we moved there we were finished with all the autopsies."

The shutdown began over the past weekend, when the morgue accepted its last body, found in the Ninth Ward in New Orleans.

FEMA has begun removing the equipment in the morgue and putting it in storage in preparation for the next disaster with high casualties.

State and local officials say they would have preferred that the federal government leave the equipment for their use, expressing concern that dozens of bodies remain to be found in the debris and damaged houses from the storm. Although state officials signed off on the morgue's disassembly in December, Louis Cataldie, the state emergency medical director, said that he thought the plan was flexible, and that the facility would still be usable after FEMA was gone.

But Smith said the federal agency's role had ended.

"Our mission is to support the state and local governments," said Smith, the incident commander of the Disaster Mortuary Operational Response Team at the Carville site. "When we get to the point where they're no longer overwhelmed, it's time for us to go."

The team, known as D-Mort, is a part of FEMA. After Hurricane Katrina, it was given the job of helping to identify storm victims.

Of the 910 bodies that were examined by D-Mort, all but 95 have been identified. About 100 have been identified but their families have not been located, or they have yet to be picked up by funeral homes.

Among D-Mort's last actions will be to transfer the remaining bodies to New Orleans, where officials are planning to build a mausoleum. Bodies that are identified, in some cases by DNA testing, could be disinterred in the future, officials said. The morgue also examined 610 bodies washed out of cemeteries after the flooding caused by Hurricanes Katrina and Rita and put them in new coffins, officials said.

The Orleans Parish morgue was destroyed in the storm, and Minyard, the coroner, said he hoped to sign a lease on an unused funeral home at the end of this week. FEMA will pay to replace equipment he already had, but neither he nor the state had a dental X-ray machine or the software that compares dental records, all of which will be removed from the Carville morgue. Nearly 400 identifications have been made using dental records.

No one seemed to know what would happen to the 70,000-square-foot, or 6,500-square-meter, building that housed the morgue, built from the ground up on private land belonging to Bear Industries, a construction supply company.

In addition to the morgue, a warehouse, and rows of never-used cubicles, it included a cafeteria and fitness center.

CARVILLE, Louisiana After using it for only 10 weeks, the Federal Emergency Management Agency has shut down a $17 million state-of-the-art morgue built to handle victims of Hurricane Katrina, according to agency officials.

The morgue, which can decontaminate and examine 150 bodies a day and has living space for nearly 500 workers, is closing because the number of bodies coming in has dwindled to about one a week, said Chuck Smith, a FEMA official.

Smith said Tuesday the morgue had been developed when officials believed there would be 5,000 deaths. Instead, there have been about 1,300 in Louisiana so far and it was apparent within a few weeks of the hurricane that the number of deaths would be 1,000 to 2,000


http://www.iht.com/articles/2006/02/15/news/orleans.php


http://www.hereinreality.com/funeralgate.htm


WHY IS THIS IMPORTANT?

Funeralgate
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search

"Funeralgate" is the name given to a scandal involving George W. Bush and family campaign contributor Robert Waltrip, owner of Service Corporation International, the largest funeral home company in the world.

In 1999, Bush was subpoenaed but refused to testify in a lawsuit filed against the state of Texas and SCI by Eliza May, former director of the Texas Funeral Service Commission, who claimed that she was fired when she refused to quit investigating SCI despite pressure from Bush and his then Chief of Staff Joe Allbaugh.

The lawsuit was quietly settled in November, 2001, weeks before the revelation in the media that two Florida cemeteries owned by SCI were recycling graves, removing remains from their places of rest and placing other people in the graves.

9,000 people have staked a claim to a $100,000,000 settlement in a lawsuit stemming from the desecration of graves at these cemeteries.

In one instance at Menorah Gardens, a Jewish cemetery, SCI desecrated graves and left corpses in the woods where they were devoured by wild hogs.

The general manager of Menorah Gardens, Peter Hartman, died by apparent suicide on December 27, 2001.<1>

Harry Whittington, was named presiding officer of the Funeral Service Commission after a major shakeup of the agency in 1999. His board reluctantly agreed to pay $50,000 as part of the settlement to end the two year-old Funeralgate case. <2>

In February 2006, Whittington was shot in the face by Vice President Dick Cheney in an apparent hunting accident.


SCI was later awarded a no-bid contract by FEMA to count and collect corpses in Louisiana after Hurricane Katrina.
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