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-Lurid Crime Tales- |
Stolen bones allegedly transplanted |
2007-09-26 |
![]() Jim Livingston, 44, of Weatherford, Texas, is one of the patients and he is suing in New York, claiming fraud and negligence by those involved in the matter, the Fort Worth (Texas) Star-Telegram reported Tuesday. Livingston has a transplanted bone in his neck that allegedly was stolen from a corpse, the newspaper said. "How can you sell parts out of a body, just like parts from a stolen car?" he asked the Star-Telegram. Criminal charges have been filed against Michael Mastromarino, owner of Biomedical Tissue Services in Brooklyn, who authorities say got funeral directors to remove body parts from cadavers without notifying families or screening for disease. Mastromarino allegedly doctored death certificates and forged consent forms. The body parts were then shipped to other companies nationwide and implanted in patients in 2004 and 2005. Five tissue processors that received human parts from Biomedical Tissue Services issued voluntarily recalls. Medtronic, a Minneapolis distributor that received the parts and also is being sued by Livingston has voluntarily recalled about 16,000 bones, a company spokesman said. |
Posted by:Delphi |
#5 So this is what the Mafia is doing now? Don't worry, China will muscle in on this soon enough. Lots of prisoners. |
Posted by: Zenster 2007-09-26 21:16 |
#4 So this is what the Mafia is doing now? They can't make enough money doing it the approved way? The criteria for tissue donation is less stringent than solid organ transplantation. They usually never have problems getting approval, since being able to help others can give the donor's loved ones solace in a unique way. Back in mid-summer 2004 a horrible misfortune happened where a man who died of rabies was mistakenly used as an organ donor. 5 people died, including a woman who got some vein tissue. |
Posted by: Penguin 2007-09-26 15:37 |
#3 ...IIRC, one of the cadavers that Mr. Mastromarino was accused of taking bones from was that of Alastair Cooke, the famed BBC journalist and probably the last friend the US ever had at that august institution. Mike |
Posted by: Mike Kozlowski 2007-09-26 15:05 |
#2 "How can you sell parts out of a body, just like parts from a stolen car?" he asked the Star-Telegram. It's in your neck, isn't it? |
Posted by: tu3031 2007-09-26 15:02 |
#1 Voluntary recalls??? How is a neck bone recalled, exactly? Or a cornea? |
Posted by: trailing wife 2007-09-26 15:00 |