
A Texas funeral home is under investigation after a huge allegedly stabbed a client, which led the authorities to discover ten decomposition bodies, including some mosquito informed.
The disturbing discovery was held on Friday when Richardson Mortuary police in Houston after reports that a funeral worker attacked a client who began filming bodies, ABC13 reported.
The victim’s sister, Tamara McGruder, said she and her brother had gone to the morgue to see her mother.
“I opened the coffin and she had mosquitoes on the face,” Tamara McGruder told The Outlet.
The gloomy video captured by McGruder and his brother showed the conditions, with extended upward bodies on tables and stretchers. Some were wrapped in plastic, while others were partially discovered.
McGruder said there was no air conditioning either.
“They are bodies in coffins, boxes, plastic bags. It is not a A/C, they are mosquitoes. It smells like rotten blood,” he said.
The unidentified funeral worker told the family to leave, but when they refuted, the Wormer stabbed McGruder’s brother, she told the exit.
The wound was minor and could lead to the hospital, according to the police.
Since the suspect claimed self -defense, the charges did not appear against them for the stabbing.
After a video of the bodies, circulating on social networks, other families recognized their loved ones.
Murita Brown recognized her grandmother, Bonnie Ashley, who was supposed to be incinerated last month, in the images.
“I saw a purple lady with the same suit to my grandmother, so I said, wait a minute, which looks like my great mom,” Murita Brown said.
“This was March 21 and it was supposed to be cremated and we were waiting for its ashes and nothing to have bone happening,” he said.
Demtrious Riley-Sylvester told Fox 26 that he also believed that his brother had already been incinerated, just to discover his body in the video.
“It’s like a garbage or a dog. Just throw it as if he were garbage, and she made me believe. We were just waiting for the ashes to bring,” he said.
Scott Bingaman, executive of the Texas Funeral Service Commission, said his agency realized the videos on Friday afternoon and contacted the police, thought he expressed to ABC13 that it was not uncommon for funerals to have bodies in tables.
Bingaman sent an inspector to investigate insect infestation reports and lack of air conditioning.
Phillips, Harris County enclosure, told ABC13 that the bodies had been transferred to other funerals with refrigerated rooms.
The owner could face criminal charges.
“You could look at the abuse of the body, things of that nature, but we will know more as we go through it,” Capts. Jim Dale, from the Houston Police Department, told The Outlet.
Richardson Mortuary did not respond immediately to the request for post comments.

