Cremated remains of 89 people discovered in vacant Ohio church
Authorities found the remains of 89 people at a vacant church in Akron, Ohio, during a search connected to an investigation into allegedly fraudulent funeral services. A pair of urban explorers discovered boxes of cremated remains in the building when they noticed the open church doors and believed it to be vacant, according to a search warrant affidavit.
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One of the explorers told authorities that some of the boxes had cremation dates going back to 2010, the affidavit stated. Children's remains were among those found in the church, NBC affiliate WKYC of Akron reported. Agents with the Ohio Attorney Generals Bureau of Criminal Investigation conducted a search Tuesday and seized the remains. State Special Agent Alvin E. Clar said in the affidavit that the items found during the search may be evidence of a violation of Ohio's law of abuse of a corpse.
The church is connected to Shawnte Hardin, 41, who allegedly ran funeral-associated services from the Akron building, prosecutors said. The court filing also alleged Hardin was connected to a Columbus business called Islamic Cemetery. He was allegedly in possession of cremated remains from that location despite prohibition of the practice by the Muslim faith, it said.
Officials did not say whether Hardin has been charged in connection with the recent findings at the church. A Lucas County grand jury indicted Hardin in October on allegations ranging from fraud to operating an unlicensed funeral home.
Seven additional charges related to death services were added last month, bringing the number of counts Hardin faces to 44, according to a spokesperson for Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost. The case spans multiple Ohio counties where Hardin allegedly did funeral-related work.
Hardin's attorney, Richard Kerger, said
"There's nothing wrong with helping people dispose the remains of their loved ones".
https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/cremated-remains-89-people-discovered-vacant-ohio-church-rcna12329