North Carolina sisters find unknown body in their mother's casket at funeral home
 
 
meaww
September 24, 2021
 
 
                                   Mary Archer: Someone else was in her casket 
 
AHOSKIE, NORTH CAROLINA: A pair of sisters had to deal with one of the 
worst mix-ups of their lives after they found another woman inside their
 mother’s casket at a funeral home. Jennifer Taylor and Jennetta 
Archer’s mother Mary Archer died in August. Earlier this month, in 
September, the sisters went to see their mother's body at Hunter’s 
Funeral Home in Ahoskie. They were shocked when they found some other 
dead woman wearing their mom’s clothes inside the casket.
Jennifer
 told 10 On Your Side, “We just couldn’t understand how this could 
happen. There’s no similarity in the person. Their size was way off. 
When the first person had the clothing on, she was swimming in the 
clothes because she was so small compared to my mother.” The pair also 
claimed that when they first confronted the staff at Hunter’s Funeral Home, they initially denied it. However, when they later went back into the embalming room, they found the body of the real Mary Archer there. 
Though the bodies were exchanged later, the sisters felt they never received a proper apology from the funeral home.
 Jennetta claimed, “No one addressed it immediately. It would have been a
 different situation if they had just come upfront and addressed it 
immediately to show that yes, they did, they made an error.”
10
 On Your Side spoke with Hunter’s Funeral Home’s lead embalmer who said 
that the mistake happened on September 7, but added that they have 
already said sorry to the family for their mistake. The lead embalmer 
also added that this kind of thing happened for the first time in more 
than 40 years of the funeral home’s history. He said they called the 
sisters for an explanation, but Jennifer and Jennetta said they did not 
receive any such call. Jennetta added: “What do you do to prevent 
something like that from happening? Don’t they have a chart per person 
and treat them like a customer or a patient or whatever you want to 
refer to them as so that you don’t have them mixed up?”
This 
happens months after a Michigan family alleged that a funeral home put 
the wrong person inside the casket during their father’s burial. Larry 
Tillman’s son, Spenser Tillman, said: “We are all very sad, all very 
distraught. Everyone knew that wasn’t our father. Even as we were 
walking in, people who knew him said,  ‘Tell them to put your father in 
the casket because that’s not your father.' Just from the way that he 
looked, there were facial features that he had that wasn’t there.”
Spenser said they kept demanding answers from Lawrence E Moon Funeral
 Home, but did not receive any explanation. Spenser noted, “We kept 
saying, ‘This is not Larry Tillman. Is there some sort of mixup?’” 
before adding that the family continued with the procedure despite their
 doubts. The son of the deceased man added: “With what we knew, and from
 what they were saying at the time, we proceeded as best as we could. 
No, we did not mourn, we didn’t cry, it was like living in the ‘Twilight
 Zone.’ We did watch them lower the body into the ground."
 
No comments:
Post a Comment