Feature Article

Body Snatchers

Four years ago, 244 corpses supposedly destined for cremation at a Philadelphia funeral home were hacked apart, their organs and tissue sold for transplantation. It’s a gruesome story of betrayal, for both the grieving families and the unwitting recipients of diseased body parts

By Dan P. Lee

Illustration by Polly Becker

Page 1 of 5

DAN OPREA'S MOTHER, Rose, was always fiercely self-reliant. Born in 1923, she grew up at 5th and Oxford. After graduating from Hallahan Catholic Girls’ High School, she married Daniel Oprea Sr., with whom she had a son. When the two divorced after seven years, Rose took it upon herself to enroll in Drexel University, where she studied electrical engineering. She became an engineer with RCA. With her only child, Rose Oprea carved out a happy life. She was not afraid of aloneness.

She and her son remained close — geographically and otherwise — as he grew older, despite the fact that they were opposites of sorts; Rose was bookish and artistic, while Dan, who took a job with the Navy, enjoyed working with his hands. (They shared a common interest in movies, something Rose instilled in her son from a young age.) Dan married and had two sons, to whom Rose was especially devoted. When Dan and his wife Mary Rose tragically lost their 26-year-old son Stephen in 2001, the mother-son bond grew stronger.

In her later years, Rose developed her share of health problems; she’d had a kidney removed years earlier, she suffered from angina and diverticulitis and a low iron count, and there was some slippage mentally. Dan and Mary Rose worried about her — her continued driving was of particular concern — and tried repeatedly to convince her to let them move in with her in the three-bedroom rancher in Huntingdon Valley that Rose had always said Dan would someday inherit. But Rose, who at 82 kept herself busy painting American Indian-syle works and running errands in her Chrysler Concorde, would have none of it. Dan and Mary Rose lived a few miles away, and Dan visited his mother every Saturday, mowing the lawn, raking leaves, changing light bulbs, whatever she needed done. The two spoke on the phone, without fail, every day.

One day in late December 2004, Dan tried to reach his mother. She didn’t answer. He figured she was out rummaging the after-Christmas sales, and wasn’t immediately worried. When it turned six o’clock and they still hadn’t heard from her, Dan and Mary Rose drove to her house. They found her car parked in the driveway. Dan used his key to unlock the front door. Inside, they called out, flipping lights on as they searched. In her bedroom, they discovered Rose lying contorted on the floor. Her dachshund Sparky stood vigil beside her.

At the hospital, doctors determined that Rose had suffered a stroke. She was completely paralyzed on one side, and she was disoriented. She could no longer speak, or write. As the days wore on and her condition stabilized, she regained little of what she’d lost. After two weeks, she was transferred to a nursing home.

 

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Body Snatchers
Posted by Anonymous | Apr. 3, 2008 at 12:19 PM
COMMENT:
Can't believe that the former host of Mystery Theatre ended up that way. Was born in Abington Hospital years ago. This article hit too close to home. Was considering having a surgical procedure on my OA knee which would consist of using body parts. Now I am having second thoughts. Makes me wonder if our local hospital in southcentral PA was one of the recipients of the organs. The day will come when a loved one will follow every move of their loved one's body from death until burial, cremation, etc. I would imagine it will become a political issue - an act of congress to have this happen. My elderly parents are entering their last years due to health problems. Home funerals are looking more appealing as far as wrong doing is concerned.
I was stunned by this.
Posted by Anonymous | Apr. 6, 2008 at 3:02 PM
COMMENT:
I read this article and was in shock. My husband had back surgery in Pittsburgh in late 2002, and refused cadaver bone. He went through the painful harvesting of his own bone. Thank goodness he made that choice.

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