COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. — A Colorado funeral home owner will be sentenced Friday for stashing nearly 200 decaying human bodies in an office building over four years.
One of the bodies was the mother of Derrick Johnson. The 45-year-old learned from the FBI that the ashes he had buried behind his home on Maui weren't actually his mother's remains. Instead, her body was languishing with 188 others in a building in Penrose, outside Colorado Springs.
It was one of the largest discoveries of decaying bodies at a funeral home in the U.S. It prompted lawmakers to overhaul the state's lax funeral home regulations.
Jon and Carie Hallford were arrested in Oklahoma in November 2023 and charged with abusing nearly 200 corpses.
The couple also admitted in a separate case to defrauding the federal government out of nearly $900,000 in pandemic-era aid for small businesses. Even as the Hallfords' bills went unpaid, authorities said the couple spent lavishly, including on Tiffany jewelry, luxury cars and laser-body sculpting as they pocketed the money clients paid for cremations.
Attorneys for Jon and Carie Hallford did not respond to an AP request for comment.
Hundreds of families learned from officials that the ashes they were given by the Hallfords weren't actually their loved ones' remains, which had instead moldered in a room-temperature building.
At Friday's sentencing, where Johnson plans to speak, Jon Hallford will be given between 30 to 50 years in prison. He was already sentenced to 20 years in the federal fraud case. Carie Hallford's hearing is in April after a judge accepted their plea deals in December.