Robert Jones: Celebrity Cruises faces $1M lawsuit for leaving passenger's dead body in walk-in beverage cooler
April 23, 2023
Widow was asked to make her own arrangements
Daily Mail reported that after his death, Marilyn, his wife, was informed that her husband's body could be stored in the ship's morgue for up to six days until they returned to Florida She had the option to either removed the body in San Juan or store it for six days until they arrived in Fort Lauderdale. Celebrity employees told Plaintiff Marilyn Jones that if she had her husband’s body taken ashore in San Juan, she would be required to stay in San Juan with his body and would have to make arrangements for transport for herself and her husband’s body back to the mainland United States.
'Cruise acted recklessly, willfully, and wantonly'
The suit read, "The cooler in which Mr Jones’ body was found by the funeral employee had drinks placed outside of the cooler, and was not at a temperature which was sufficient nor proper for storing a dead body to prevent decomposition," and further read, "By allowing Mr Jones’ body to decompose while on the ship to such a state that his family was unable to have open casket funeral and wake services, denying his wife of 55 years, children, grandchildren, friends, and community the closure their family and community deserved, a practice which was a part of his family’s culture." The complaint also stated, "The Celebrity crew in charge of storing Mr Jones body during the six remaining days of the cruise acted recklessly, willfully, and wantonly, and without care for the Jones family’s loved one by failing to ensure that the morgue was properly working for the duration of the near week that the remains were stored under their care."
37 deaths on the cruise since 2001
The lawsuit stressed that the cruise should have been equipped to handle a death, stating "heart attacks and cardiac incidents as the leading cause of death among passengers on its ships, having had at least 37 deaths on board its own cruise ships since 2001. The family's attorneys are now seeking a jury trial.
1 comment:
People die every day, and the beverage cooler seems better than leaving him covered on a deck chair or in the engine room. Beverage and food storage coolers usually stay at 42 degrees. That's pretty cold so I don't think there will be much of a settlement. If foul play is suspected then the FBI must perform the investigation. RIP.
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