Open source traffic analysis

ABA Home
International Law

Mom’s in Cold Storage, But That’s Legal

Posted Sep 6, 2007, 10:32 am CST
By Martha Neil

Two British sisters who have kept their mother's body in cold storage at a London funeral home for a decade as they visited her there almost weekly have broken no laws.

But family friends are now trying to end the two 50-something sisters' practice of regularly sitting with their 84-year-old mother's mummified body at the funeral home, reports the Sun, a British tabloid. (It has also interested readers of the upscale London Times, who have put the Times version on the paper's most-read list.) The sisters have paid G. Saville and Sons of Wembley to refrigerate their mother's body for a decade at a cost of 20 pounds per week, and the funeral home also regularly touches up her makeup.

“No health and safety violations have been breached, and the corpse does not smell," funeral director Phillip Saville tells the Sun. "There are no laws saying people can’t keep a corpse for years after registering the death, though it is normal to bury the body after just two weeks.”

E-Mail This Story


(Separate multiple addresses with a comma.)




Share This Story

URL to share: http://www.abajournal.com/news/moms_in_cold_storage_but_thats_legal/

Title: Mom’s in Cold Storage, But That’s Legal


Comments

    Be the first to comment.


Commenting is not available in this weblog entry.



Subscribe

Get the ABA Journal the way you want it — in print, online, by e-mail — and when you want it — monthly, weekly, daily or as news breaks.



Subscribe via RSS
Subscribe to the mobile edition
Subscribe to the monthly magazine


Return to top