Women who sold body parts out of their Colorado funeral home are sentenced to prison

GRAND JUNCTION, Colo. — As Megan Hess and Shirley Koch held out their arms, the soft clink of metal handcuffs was audible in the federal courtroom.

And with that sound, dozens of victims let out gasps — hugging, crying and laughing at the conclusion Tuesday of a real-life body-snatching case that the judge acknowledged had little precedent in American history.

“We came today to hear the handcuffs click,” said Erin Smith, who brought her mother’s body to Sunset Mesa Funeral Directors in Montrose after her death in 2011. Seven years later, the FBI informed her family that her mother wasn’t cremated but instead dismembered and sold for profit.

U.S. District

Related News

Prediction Markets Let You Bet on Whether a Wildfire Will Burn Down Your Town

What Are Fish Oil Supplements Good For? Here’s Your Crash Course

Workers claim unsafe conditions at a restaurant owned by the South Park creators. They have Brooke Shields on their side

Trump Accounts are now live. Here’s what you need to know

How I Went From Side Hustle to 7 Figures in 12 Months Using 4 AI Tools (No Employees, No Investors)

AI Can Do a Lot — But Most Companies Don’t Want It Talking to Their Clients. Here’s Why.