TEXAS WOMAN CHARGED WITH MEDICAL CHILD ABUSE FOR FALSIFYING TODDLER’S HEALTH AND PUSHING UNNECESSARY FEEDING TUBE SURGERIES. (PHOTO).
Colorado woman sentenced to 18 years for mismanagement of funeral home where bodies decomposed
A federal judge on Monday sentenced Carie Hallford, former manager of a Colorado funeral home, to 18 years in prison after she and her husband allowed nearly 200 bodies to decompose in a warehouse rather than properly burying or cremating them.
U.S. District Judge Nina Wang said Hallford repeatedly assured families their loved ones would be cared for, describing her as “an equal partner in the fraud.” Before imposing the sentence, the judge read aloud a list of victims to highlight the human toll of the scheme.
Hallford and her husband, Jon, opened Return to Nature Funeral Home in Colorado Springs in 2017, later expanding to Penrose in 2019. Initially praised for offering eco-friendly funeral services, the business began defrauding clients years before authorities discovered 191 decomposing bodies stacked in the Penrose warehouse in 2023. Investigators found bodies pooling on the floor, some of which were identified as belonging to families who had paid between $900 and $1,400 for cremations and more for burials.
Federal prosecutors said Hallford managed the front of the business, handling customer interactions, paperwork, and finances, while Jon Hallford oversaw transport and preparation of the bodies. From 2019 to 2023, the couple defrauded hundreds of families, collecting $193,000 from the identified victims and potentially mishandling nearly 1,000 additional cases.
During sentencing, victims described the emotional toll of the ordeal. Kelly Schloesser, whose mother, Mary Lou Ehrlich, was among those improperly stored, said the Hallfords’ actions forced families to relive their grief repeatedly in court. Prosecutors highlighted Hallford’s role in the fraud and her involvement in a false federal Covid-19 relief application, which secured $882,300 in federal funds that were spent on personal items, vacations, and luxury goods.
Hallford’s defense cited years of abuse from her husband, describing her actions as influenced by fear and coercion. Judge Wang acknowledged the abuse but said it did not absolve her of responsibility, noting Hallford had repeated opportunities to make different choices.
Carie Hallford, divorced from Jon Hallford last week, apologized in court, saying she was not the person portrayed by the case and expressed relief at being free from her abusive relationship. Jon Hallford, previously sentenced to 40 years in state court, oversaw the funeral home’s operations that led to the unprecedented scandal.
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