Four individuals, including the manager of Harvard Medical School’s morgue, Cedric Lodge, have been charged with the illegal trade of stolen human remains.
Lodge is alleged to have taken various body parts, including heads, brains, skin, and bones, from cadavers donated to Harvard University’s medical school and sold them online.
Alongside his wife, Denise, Lodge is accused of selling these body parts to buyers in Pennsylvania and Massachusetts between 2018 and 2021.
According to prosecutors, Lodge exploited his role as the manager of the “Anatomical Gifts Program” at Harvard Medical School to dismember cadavers that were initially donated for medical research.
Typically, donated bodies are utilized by Harvard students for studying and practicing medical procedures. Once the school completes its use of the cadavers, the remains are either returned to the families or interred in the university’s medical cemetery through cremation.
However, the indictment alleges that Lodge and his wife engaged in the unlawful activity of harvesting, selling, and shipping body parts from these donated cadavers instead.
“At times, Cedric Lodge allowed [others] to enter the morgue at Harvard Medical School and examine cadavers to choose what to purchase,” according to a statement from the US Attorney’s Office.
Katrina Maclean of Salem, Massachusetts, and Joshua Taylor, of West Lawn, Pennsylvania, allegedly bought body parts.

According to the charging statement, in October 2020, Ms Maclean purchased dissected faces for $600 (£473) that she intended to have tanned into leather.
Ms Maclean is the owner of a store called Kat’s Creepy Creations. Social media accounts for the business show she specialised in up-cycling dolls into gothic, blood-soaked, horror novelties. It is unclear if the cadaver parts were used in her products. The indictment alleges she stored and sold human remains at the store.
Mr Taylor allegedly made 39 electronic payments to Ms Lodge for stolen body parts over the course of four years, totalling more than $37,000 (£29,226). The indictment included a grim reference to a PayPal memo for a purchase of $1,000 (£790) that allegedly read, “head number 7”.
“Some crimes defy understanding,” said United States Attorney Gerard M. Karam in a statement. “The theft and trafficking of human remains strikes at the very essence of what makes us human.”
Both Cedric and Denise Lodge refused to answer reporters’ questions after making an initial appearance at a New Hampshire federal courthouse on Wednesday.
All four defendants have been indicted on conspiracy and interstate transport of stolen goods charges. If convicted, they each face up to 15 years in prison.