Current:Home > MarketsColorado funeral home with ‘green’ burials under investigation after improperly stored bodies found -Wealth Momentum Network
Colorado funeral home with ‘green’ burials under investigation after improperly stored bodies found
View
Date:2025-04-21 06:22:43
PENROSE, Colo. (AP) — Authorities are investigating the improper storage of human remains at a southern Colorado funeral home that performs “green” burials without embalming chemicals or metal caskets.
The investigation centers on a building owned by the Return to Nature Funeral Home outside Colorado Springs in the small town of Penrose.
Deputies were called to the single-story building on Tuesday night in reference to a suspicious incident. Investigators returned the next day with a search warrant and found the improperly stored remains, the Fremont County Sheriff’s Office said. The number of human remains found and their condition were not specified.
The sheriff’s office said it was working with state and federal officials on the investigation. Family members who used the funeral home were asked to contact the sheriff’s office. More details were expected to be released by officials at a scheduled news conference Friday morning.
Trash bags could be seen Thursday outside the entrance of the company’s building, with two law enforcement vehicles parked in front. Yellow police tape cordoned off the area and a putrid odor pervaded the air.
A hearse was parked at the back of the building, in a parking lot overgrown with weeds. Near the squat building was a post office and a few scattered homes, spaced out between dry grass and empty lots with parked semi-trucks.
Under Colorado law, green burials are legal but state code requires that any body not buried within 24 hours must be properly refrigerated.
Joyce Pavetti, 73, can see the funeral home from the stoop of her house and said she caught whiffs of a putrid smell in the last few weeks.
“We just assumed it was a dead animal,” she said. On Wednesday night, Pavetti said she could see lights from law enforcement swarming around the building and knew something was going on.
The building has been occupied by different businesses over the years, said Pavetti, who once took yoga classes there. She hasn’t seen anyone in the area recently and noticed the hearse behind the building only in recent months, she said.
Neighbor Ron Alexander thought the smell was coming from a septic tank, adding that Wednesday night’s blur of law enforcement lights “looked like the 4th of July.”
The father of a 25-year-old U.S. Navy serviceman who died last summer said Return to Nature handled his son’s body between the time of its arrival back in Colorado and an Aug. 25 funeral service at Pikes Peak National Cemetery east of Colorado Springs.
“I mean, there’s obviously questions after hearing that there is something going on but there’s not any information that I can go off of to really make any kind of judgement on it,” said Paul Saito Kahler, of Fountain, Colorado.
The Return to Nature Funeral Home provides burial of non-embalmed bodies in biodegradable caskets, shrouds or “nothing at all,” according to its website. The company also provides cremation services. Messages left for the Colorado Springs-based company were not immediately returned.
“No embalming fluids, no concrete vaults. As natural as possible,” it says on its website.
The company charges $1,895 for a “natural burial.” That doesn’t include the cost of a casket and cemetery space, according to the website.
The funeral home also performs cremations that involve no chemicals or unnatural materials — “just you and the Earth, returning to nature,” according to its website.
Return to Nature was established six years ago in Colorado Springs, according to public records.
Under Colorado law, green burials are legal but state code requires that any body not buried within 24 hours must be properly refrigerated.
Fremont County property records show that the funeral home building and lot are owned by Hallfordhomes, LLC, a business with a Colorado Springs address that the Colorado Secretary of State declared delinquent on Oct. 1 for failing to file a routine reporting form that was due at the end of July.
The LLC changed addresses around Colorado Springs three times since its establishment in 2016 with a post office box. Hallfordhomes still owes about $5,000 in 2022 property taxes on its building in Penrose, according to Fremont County records.
A green burial refers to burying bodies that have not been embalmed. That’s different from human composting, in which the body is placed in a vessel and transformed into soil.
The Return to Nature Funeral Home was licensed in Colorado Springs in 2017. There were no disciplinary actions against the company listed on a state license database. There was not a separate license for the Penrose facility and it wasn’t known if one was needed. Messages left with licensing authorities were not immediately returned.
___
Associated Press writers Amy Beth Hanson in Helena, Montana, Mead Gruver in Cheyenne, Wyoming, Matthew Brown in Billings, Montana, and news researcher Jennifer Farrar in New York contributed.
veryGood! (13)
Related
- Woman dies after Singapore family of 3 gets into accident in Taiwan
- Homophobic speech in youth sports harms straight white boys most, study finds
- A tech company hired a top NYC official’s brother. A private meeting and $1.4M in contracts followed
- Canadian man admits shootings that damaged electrical substations in the Dakotas
- Senate begins final push to expand Social Security benefits for millions of people
- No pressure, Mauricio Pochettino. Only thing at stake is soccer's status in United States
- As civic knowledge declines, programs work to engage young people in democracy
- Barry Keoghan Confesses He Doesn't Have Normal Relationship With Son Brando
- South Korea's acting president moves to reassure allies, calm markets after Yoon impeachment
- Dancing With the Stars' Artem Chigvintsev Responds to Nikki Garcia’s Divorce Filing
Ranking
- Global Warming Set the Stage for Los Angeles Fires
- How police failed to see the suspected Georgia shooter as a threat | The Excerpt
- Still adjusting to WWE life, Jade Cargill is 'here to break glass ceilings'
- What exactly is soy lecithin? This food additive is more common than you might think.
- $73.5M beach replenishment project starts in January at Jersey Shore
- Retired Oklahoma Catholic bishop Edward Slattery dies at 84
- Judge frees Colorado paramedic convicted in death of Elijah McClain from prison
- Going once, going twice: Google’s millisecond ad auctions are the focus of monopoly claim
Recommendation
Pressure on a veteran and senator shows what’s next for those who oppose Trump
Ballerina Michaela DePrince, whose career inspired many after she was born into war, dies at 29
Sonya Massey family joins other victims of police violence to plead for change
Gunman says he heard ‘killing voices’ before Colorado supermarket shooting
John Galliano out at Maison Margiela, capping year of fashion designer musical chairs
Boeing workers on strike for the 1st time in 16 years after 96% vote to reject contract
Caitlin Clark, Patrick Mahomes' bland answers evoke Michael Jordan era of athlete activism
Robert De Niro slams Donald Trump: 'He's a jerk, an idiot'