FBI agent describes grisly warehouse in
start of body broker's trial
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[January 16, 2018]
By Steve Friess and John Shiffman
DETROIT (Reuters) - The warehouse of a
Michigan man who sold donated body parts to researchers was littered
with dead flies, dog bowls and human remains “frozen together in
flesh-on-flesh chunks,” a federal agent testified Friday.
The grisly description came during the opening day in the federal trial
of businessman Arthur Rathburn, who sold or leased donated body parts,
including human heads, to medical researchers for two decades.
The buying and selling of body parts for research and education is legal
under U.S. law, which does not govern the industry. Current regulations
only cover body parts intended for transplant, such as hearts and
livers.
Rathburn, however, is charged with defrauding customers by selling them
body parts infected with hepatitis and HIV, and with lying to federal
agents about shipments.
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During opening statements, Assistant U.S. Attorney John Neal told jurors
that human remains were stored so haphazardly that Rathburn needed a
crowbar to separate frozen parts. Federal Bureau of Investigation agent
Leslie Larson testified that during the 2013 search of Rathburn’s
warehouse, officials found a filthy scene, with no running water or
heat.
“Body parts were out in the open, in coolers,” Larson testified. “Some
of the freezers had heads and torsos, some had arms and legs. Many were
frozen together in flesh-on-flesh chunks.”
Rathburn’s lawyer, James Howarth, urged the jury to focus on the
documents in the case, not gruesome photographs. He said that Rathburn’s
ex-wife, Elizabeth, is “most responsible” for any wrongdoing. She has
pleaded guilty to one count of fraud and is expected to testify for the
government.
“This case is so sensitive because the nature of the evidence is going
to make us all cringe, make us all uneasy,” Howarth told the jury.
“There’s nothing particularly pretty about a deceased body that has been
separated into parts, but I would hope no one would have bad feelings
toward Mr. Rathburn because of that.”
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FBI agents search the premises during a December 2013 raid on
Arthur Rathburn’s warehouse in Detroit, Michigan, U.S. Agents said
they found "thousands" of body parts during the raid. REUTERS/Steve
Neavling/File Photo
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The government’s failure to stop Rathburn sooner, despite a decade
of warning signs, was one in a series of stories Reuters reported
last year about the largely unregulated body broker industry.
As part of the news agency’s examination of the industry, a Reuters
reporter was able to purchase two human heads and a cervical spine
from a body broker in Tennessee. The deals were struck after just a
few emails, at a cost of $900 plus shipping.
The series also profiled two Phoenix brokers - one who earned at
least $12 million from the sale or use of donated body parts and
another who regularly supplied Rathburn. The broker who sold
Rathburn body parts, Steve Gore, pleaded guilty to defrauding
customers and is expected to testify against Rathburn.
Last month, Reuters reported that federal agents discovered four
preserved fetuses during the search of Rathburn’s warehouse.
According to government photographs obtained by the news agency, the
fetuses appear to have been in their second trimester.
The fetus photographs are not cited in any court filings and it is
unclear if they will be presented at trial.
(Friess reported from Detroit and Shiffman reported from Washington.
Edited by Blake Morrison)
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