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L.A. Family Sues Mortuary For Dressing the Wrong Corpse in Their Loved Ones’ Suit, But Things Get Worse…

In a lawsuit, the family of Otis Adkinson says mistakes made by Harrison-Ross Mortuary led to "confusing, emotional distress, and arguments amongst the family."

Amentha Hunt went to Harrison-Ross Mortuary in Compton, Calif., to pay her respects to her uncle Otis Adkinson, who died on Feb. 28 at 80. But though her family signed a contract with the business to prepare her uncleโ€™s body for burial and gave them one of his suits to wear at the April 7 viewing, Hunt made a surprising, horrifying discovery.

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โ€œIt was a guy laying there in my uncleโ€™s suit, but it wasnโ€™t my uncle,โ€ Hunt told KCAL News. โ€œI just kept looking at him. I am like โ€˜He couldnโ€™t have gotten that dark.โ€™โ€

Hunt says she tried telling a mortuary employee that they had the wrong body, but they dismissed her concerns until she showed them a picture that proved the man they were looking at was not Adkinson. Once the mortuary realized the mixup, guests had to wait three hours while they prepared the right body for burial.

Now, Otis Adkinsonโ€™s family is suing the funeral home for โ€œnegligence, breach of contract and intentional infliction of emotional distress.โ€ Language in the lawsuit they filed with the Superior Court of the State of California, County of Los Angeles on May 15 states that the family was โ€œextremely distraught leading to confusing, emotional distress, and arguments amongst the family about why the wrong corpse was at the viewing.โ€

Family attorney Elvis Tran says he wants justice for Adkinsonโ€™s family and to make sure a mixup like this doesnโ€™t happen to anyone else.

โ€œFor them to come in and see the wrong corpse, and for the mortuary to deny itโ€™s the wrong corpse, we think itโ€™s really just a basic standard of care that they messed up on,โ€ he told KCAL News. โ€œThey really need to improve their ways so they donโ€™t do this to another family.โ€

No matter what happens with their case, Amentha Hunt told KCAL News that she still lives with the pain of seeing someone else in her uncleโ€™s suit.

โ€œItโ€™s hurting,โ€ she said. โ€œTo view the wrong corpse, I still can see that guy.โ€

Straight From The Root

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