Friday, April 18, 2025 - A former Harvard Medical School morgue manager accused of stealing and selling human organs and other parts of cadavers donated to the school for medical research and education has agreed to plead guilty.
Cedric Lodge, 57, of Goffstown, New Hampshire, was
indicted in June 2023 and accused of stealing and selling heads, brains, skin
and bones from cadavers that were donated to the university as part of a
“nationwide network” between 2018 and 2023, prosecutors said.
Lodge and his wife, Denise, allegedly sold
the body parts to buyers in Pennsylvania and Massachusetts and
shipped them via the postal service to clients who, in one instance, intended
to tan skin into leather.
Denise Lodge (left in black)
Cedric Lodge, who managed Harvard's morgue for more than two decades
before his 2023 arrest, has agreed to plead guilty to transporting stolen
goods across state lines, which carries a maximum 10-year prison sentence and a
$250,000 fine, according to a plea agreement filed on Wednesday, April 16,
in federal court in Williamsport, Pennsylvania.
Remaining charges of conspiracy and transport of stolen goods are due to
be dropped.
A hearing on his plea change has not been scheduled, although his trial
was initially scheduled for May.
The expected plea change comes almost a year after Denise Lodge, 64, who was accused of shipping stolen human body parts to buyers, pleaded guilty on the count of aiding and abetting interstate transport of stolen goods in April last year.
Lodge worked at Harvard University for approximately 28 years before being
fired in May 2023.
As well as taking body parts to his home, Lodge had also
allowed potential buyers into the school’s morgue to hand-pick what
human remains they wanted, prosecutors said.
The cadavers are intended for educational, teaching, or
research purposes and are donated to the medical school through the Anatomical
Gifts Program.
Alongside the Lodges, four other defendants were indicted by
a federal grand jury in Pennsylvania on charges of conspiracy and interstate
transport of stolen goods.
One of those charged was Katrina Maclean, 44, from Salem,
Massachusetts, who owns a store called Kat’s Creepy Creations in Peabody.
0 Comments