Miles Harford’s guilty plea in Denver follows years of other gruesome funeral home cases in Colorado, including one where the owners were accused of storing nearly 200 bodies in a decrepit building and giving families fake cremated remains.

Harford, 34, faced a dozen counts including forgery, theft and four counts of abuse of a corpse, which prosecutors described as treating bodies or remains “in a way that would outrage normal family sensibilities.”

The plea agreement dismisses the rest of the counts, but the judge said the agreement requires that all victims be named within the two charges Harford pleaded guilty to, and that he would be liable for restitution including for the dismissed counts.

    • HellsBelle@sh.itjust.worksOP
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      9 days ago

      A long time ago (45 yrs or so) I knew someone who worked in a funeral home. Every Friday night they held a poker game and, if they were short a player, would prop up a corpse as the dummy hand.