37 boxes of cremains found in storage

ATHENS, Mich. (WOOD) — It’s a surprising discovery after the owner of  a funeral home in Athens recently died: more than 35 boxes of cremains  were found storage.

A Battle Creek woman whose mother died more than two years ago  thought she was given her mom’s cremains immediately after her mom was  cremated. But Julie Decker got a call from the medical examiner’s office  saying a box of her mom’s cremains were found in “a room” last week.

Now, Decker is left questioning everything about her mom’s cremation.

“Who knows whose ashes they have?” Decker said. “If they have a box  of my mother’s ashes, who did I get? I don’t know. Did I get just half  of her? Did I get half of somebody else?

Medical Examiner Dr. Joyce DeJong told 24 Hour News 8 that Joy  Spencer, also known as Joy Spoors, recently died. She and her husband  Jim used to own Spencer’s Funeral Home in Athens.

It was Spoors’ family who found 37 boxes of cremains. DeJong said her  office is just starting the process of identifying the cremains and  returning them to families. She doesn’t know yet why the remains were  being stored.

In statement provided to 24 Hour News 8 Thursday, Lighthouse Funeral  & Cremation Services, which bought Spencer Funeral Home at a federal  bankruptcy auction, said it received “several boxes … that contained  the cremated remains of those that had not been claimed” from Spoors’  family members following her death.

“While it is unusual for the former owner to hold to them for nearly 2  years, it is not unusual for a funeral home to be in possession of  unclaimed cremated remains,” the statement continues.

“If they filed for bankruptcy, were they saving money and just giving people other ashes? Who knows?” Decker said.

Lighthouse said it turned the remains over to the county medical  examiner’s office at the Western Michigan University School of Medicine.

Full Story on WOODTV8


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