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Son of Saugus woman who willed her body to Harvard Medical School sues over body-parts sales

The son of a Saugus woman who willed her body to Harvard Medical School in 2019 today sued Harvard University and its former medical-school morgue director - who now faces federal criminal charges that he ran the morgue as a supermarket for people who liked to collect brains, heads, faces, hearts and other parts from bodies that were only supposed to be used for medical education and research.

In his suit, filed in Suffolk Superior Court, John Bozek of Tewksbury is seeking to become lead plaintiff in a class action for as many as 400 families against the university and Cedric Lodge - who was arrested this week along with his wife, the owner of a Peabody store specializing in creepy objects - including, allegedly, actual human parts - and other people in Pennsylvania and Arkansas:

The law recognizes that human beings are entitled to be treated with decency and dignity after death, including by not having their bodies mishandled, viewed, dismembered, and/or sold by those entrusted with them. Families who lose loved ones find solace in temporarily entrusting the bodies of their loved ones to an institution such as Harvard Medical School with the goal of furthering academic and medical research. The actions of the Harvard Medical School morgue manager in mishandling and selling the body parts of cadavers donated to the school was a reprehensible tragedy that should never have happened.

Bozek's mother, Adele Mazzone, died at 74 on Feb. 5, 2019, leaving behind her husband and five children, after a career as a hair stylis and colorist on the North Shore. She grew up in Marblehead and moved to Saugus from Revere just two years before her death.

Prior to her death, Adele Mazzone arranged with Harvard and HMS to temporarily donate her body to Harvard and HMS to further the study of science and medicine.

Adele Mazzone's deceased body was delivered to Harvard and HMS shortly after her death.

Upon information and belief, the body of Adele Mazzone was one of the many donated cadavers mishandled at the HMS morgue by Defendant Cedric Lodge. ...

The purported ashes of Adele Mazzone were delivered to her next of kin and surviving family in or around April 2021.

Bozek accuses Harvard of negligence for failing to keep somebody like Lodge from stripping and selling off loved one's body parts, in violation of both common human decency and more specifically a state law that bars the desecration of bodies, of causing the families emotional distress on learning what might have happened to their loved one's bodies at the hands of a ghoulish sales ring. The complaint makes similar complaints against Lodge.

The suit seeks an end to dissecting, let alone selling, any bodies or parts for profit at Harvard Medical School, that Harvard show how it's going to keep this sort of thing from ever happening again and that it set up a fund to remunerate affected families, in amounts to be determined at trial.

In a message to the Harvard Medical School community after news broke of the arrests, George Daley, Harvard's dean of the faculty of medicine and Edward Hundert, dean for medical education, wrote they were doing more than just being appalled by the whole situation:

Harvard University has appointed an external panel of experts to evaluate our Anatomical Gift Program and morgue policies and practices, with the goal of providing constructive feedback and recommendations to improve security for the program and for the generous whole-body donations it receives.

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Comments

Respect for the speed of this litigation.

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Filing the very next day certainly confirms that this is all about profound distress over the disrespectful treatment of the sacred remains of cherished loved ones, and not a cash grab.

I'm sure many families are upset, but the only injured parties are, well, dead.

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That's really not the point.

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...not every criminal case needs to become a civil case. The rush to damages mainly enriches lawyers.

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Also, don't you think they heard about this before it was reported on the news?

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But I'm not sure Harvard or law enforcement would be able to identify exactly whose corpses were involved at this point. Wouldn't you think the investigation focused more on *what* was sold than *who* was sold?

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Is parts... (Wendy's commercial)

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Donated our bodies for medical research and parts ended up being sold on the black market for gags. Ya, I’d sue the fuck out of everyone involved. And this is coming from someone that’s very anti-lawsuit. This is on another level of disrespect.

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of many.

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I can't even imagine this. When I was on city council in Chelsea we wanted to donate some chairs we were getting rid of to an organization and it required all sorts of paperwork. How exactly do things like skulls just find their way into these markets??? I'd be very curious to see from this lawsuit what their process is for taking these parts out of their circulation/storage

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Basically, the researchers and students were done with their studies. The people accused could take what they wanted without anyone knowing since they were the one responsible for sending the parts out to cremation anyway.

That's my layman's understanding, at least.

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That would make sense... But many stores you can't even sneak a candy bar out of the back stock area due to redundancy and tracking. Whichever route the parts took id be curious to see how unsecure they are.

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The manager of the morgue was doing this. That's how it happened.

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No kidding huh? I mean I guess that explains it all!

You are aware that in many fields you don't just let the manager do whatever they want without a paper trail, accountability and audits?

Did you think I didn't read the first line of the thousand stories written in this?

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Especially if you're the one in charge.

Alter the records as needed, handle some bodies yourself when no one else is around (or, you're the manager, just hire a trusted person to act as an accomplice), and then how does someone audit whether or not a cremated body still had all its parts when it was cremated?

And beyond that - cadavers don't really have much value to the vast majority of us, so I'm sure no one thought that there was any need to pay for increased security or surveillance on something that no one would want to steal. Pretty different from a regular store where theft is much more common and expected.

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