Funeral directors told they face jail after decomposing bodies found in mortuary – Bundlezy

Funeral directors told they face jail after decomposing bodies found in mortuary

Hayley Bell (left) and Richard Elkin (right), two funeral directors who lied about cremating the body of an 87-year-old man, are pictured.
Hayley Bell (left) and Richard Elkin (right) lied about cremating the body of an 87-year-old man (Picture: Solent News)

Two funeral directors have been convicted of preventing the decent burial of a body and fraud offences.

Richard Elkin, 49, and Hayley Bell, 42, could face jail time after a decomposing body was found in their mortuary room.

The pair were found guilty at Portsmouth Crown Court of intentionally causing public nuisance between June 27, 2022, and December 11, 2023, and preventing lawful burial of a body between November 3, 2023, and December 11, 2023.

They were also convicted of carrying on a business fraudulently between August 10, 2022, and December 11, 2023, while running Elkin and Bell Funerals in Gosport, Hampshire.

Elkin was also found guilty of forging a funeral directing certificate and using it as a false certificate on or before December 10, 2023.

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He also previously pleaded guilty to illegal possession of pepper spray.

Pictured is Elkin and Bell Funerals. Richard Elkin, 49, and Hayley Bell, 42, were convicted of preventing the decent burial of a body and fraud offences at Portsmouth Crown Court.
The pair could face jail time after convictions in relation to how they ran Elkin and Bell Funerals (pictured) in Gosport, Hampshire (Picture: CPS)

Judge James Newton-Price KC adjourned the case for pre-sentence reports to be prepared on the pair.

He warned the defendants that they could face jail time. They will be sentenced on February 19.

Releasing them on conditional bail, the judge said: ‘I am going to adjourn sentencing in this case for pre-sentence reports on both defendants because I need to know more about each of you.

‘Neither of you gave evidence in this trial and I need to know a little more about your circumstances and the circumstances surrounding these offences.

‘You should prepare yourselves for an immediate custodial sentence.’

Prosecutor Lesley Bates KC told the court that the bodies of two elderly men were found by High Court enforcement agents who had been tasked with repossessing the premises due to of unpaid rent and debts.

She said the room was not refrigerated and that water was coming in through a leak in the roof of the mortuary room, adding that the body of one of the men, 87-year-old William Mitchell, ‘showed obvious signs of decomposition’.

The defendants said the body of Mr Mitchell had remained because the cremation fees had not been paid when the costs had actually been covered by a funeral payment plan, Ms Bates told the court.

Pictured is the fake funeral directing certificate used by Elkin
The fake funeral directing certificate used by Elkin (Picture: CPS)

She said Mr Mitchell’s family ‘were incredulous’ when told by police that his body had not been cremated in the planned private cremation and had even placed a wreath at Portchester Crematorium in the ‘mistaken belief that his body had been cremated there’.

The prosecutor told the jury that there had been five other known cases of ‘badly decomposed’ bodies kept in the mortuary room of Elkin and Bell.

Ms Bates said there were more than 40 other bodies stored at the funeral directors between June 28, 2022, and December 10, 2023, which were not seen separately at hospital.

She said: ‘Bearing in mind the condition of the bodies they did see, what happened to these others?’

Ms Bates said that the funeral directors was previously investigated by the Gosport Environmental Health Partnership in August 2021 and issued with improvement notices which the defendants responded to by buying a refrigeration unit on eBay which was unsuitable because of the size of the room.

Rachel Robertson, of CPS Wessex, said Elkin and Bell ‘showed a grave disregard for the dignity owed to the deceased in their care’.

She added that ‘their conduct caused serious harm to those coming into contact with their business and the families who had placed the care of deceased loved ones in their trust’.

Assistant Chief Constable Paul Bartolomeo, of Hampshire Constabulary, called for new legislation following similar cases elsewhere in the country.

He said the defendants had betrayed the trust of the families ‘in the worst way possible’, adding that ‘we need new legislation rather than relying on common law. We also need better regulation’.

‘Combined, this can help ensure that all funeral directors act, as the majority do, with professionalism and compassion,’ he said.

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