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Search
for missing bodies could last eight months
By
Patricia M. LaHay
Associated Press
NOBLE,
Ga. (AP) The operation to recover discarded human remains
from pits, sheds, metal vaults and even a shallow lake near a crematory
could last at least eight months, and the cost could top earlier
estimates of $10 million, officials said Thursday.
The
3-acre lake, which has already yielded two bodies, will be drained
as part of the search, officials said.
Theres
just no way to even guess at a cost until we stop finding bodies.
And were finding them everywhere, said Gary McConnell,
director of the Georgia Emergency Management Agency.
Since
Friday, 242 bodies have been discovered at Tri-State Crematory in
Noble, about 20 miles south of Chattanooga, Tenn. That count was
expected to rise as authorities begin examining six newly opened
vaults; state medical examiner Dr. Kris Sperry said the vaults could
hold as many as 20 corpses each.
Crematory
operator Ray Brent Marsh, 28, remained jailed Thursday for allegedly
accepting payment for cremations he did not intend to perform.
Forensics
experts are testing the contents of urns returned to families and
funeral homes by Tri-State and have determined that roughly one
in eight is filled with a mixture of dirt or cement dust.
Investigators
have subpoenaed natural gas records and planned to inspect the incinerator
to determine the last time it had been used.
They
also turned their attention to possible employees of the crematory,
although they had not found any personnel or tax records, Coroner
Dewayne Wilson said.
McConnell
estimated the state has already spent $5 million searching for bodies,
and the state said it now wants to lease land and set up temporary
facilities because the operation likely will last eight months or
more.
Among
the expenses was $500,000 a week for a temporary morgue in a 14,000-square-foot
tent, with 50 pathologists working to identify remains.
In
addition, more than 10,000 pieces of human remains had been sent
for DNA tests since Monday, and the state has about 450 workers
on site, along with dozens of FBI and federal mortuary workers,
McConnell said.
The
tricky job of draining the lake will likely involve trucking or
pumping the water out slowly so bodies wont wash away, he
said.
The
project wont begin until two more tests show whether the water
is safe. Nearby residents have already been cleared to drink well
water, McConnell said.
Thirty-five
bodies have been identified. Wilson said his office receives about
600 phone calls a day from families as far away as Canada about
the whereabouts of their loved ones.
Marsh
faces 16 counts of theft by deception. More charges, including possible
federal charges, were pending. A bond hearing was postponed until
he has a lawyer, district attorney Buzz Franklin said.
McConnell
met with Gov. Roy Barnes and state senators to ask for more money
for the investigation. The case doesnt qualify for federal
emergency funds because it is not a natural disaster, state Sen.
George Hooks said.
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