Ex-Morgue Manager Pleads Guilty to 'Abhorrent Betrayal'

Cedric Lodge stole, sold parts of bodies donated to Harvard Medical School
By Newser Editors and Wire Services
Posted May 22, 2025 5:35 PM CDT
Ex-Morgue Manager Pleads Guilty to 'Abhorrent Betrayal'
Pedestrians walk toward the Harvard Medical School in Boston.   (AP Photo/Charles Krupa, File)

A former Harvard Medical School morgue manager has admitted his role in the theft and sale of human body parts—including hands, feet, and heads. Cedric Lodge, 57, of Goffstown, New Hampshire, pleaded guilty Wednesday in Pennsylvania to interstate transport of stolen human remains, federal prosecutors said. He could face up to 10 years in prison, the AP reports. The thefts from the morgue in Boston occurred from 2018 through at least March 2020, prosecutors said. Authorities have said Lodge, his wife, and others were part of a nationwide network of people who bought and sold human remains stolen from Harvard and a mortuary in Arkansas.

Denise Lodge and several other defendants have pleaded guilty to various charges stemming from the scheme. Prosecutors have said she negotiated online sales of several items, including two dozen hands, two feet, nine spines, portions of skulls, five dissected human faces, and two dissected heads. Authorities have said the dissected portions of cadavers donated to the school were taken without the school's knowledge or permission. Bodies donated to Harvard Medical School are used for education, teaching, or research purposes. Once they are no longer needed, the cadavers are usually cremated and the ashes are returned to the donor's family or buried in a cemetery.

After Lodge's arrest in 2023, the medical school's dean, George Q. Daley, called his actions an "abhorrent betrayal." After a plea deal was announced last month, Daley said, "Cedric Lodge's criminal actions were morally reprehensible and a disgraceful betrayal of the individuals who altruistically chose to will their bodies to Harvard Medical School's Anatomical Gift Program to advance medical education and research," the dean said, per the Harvard Crimson. Officials reviewed the Anatomical Gift Program in 2023 and recommended changes including improvements to morgue security. (More morgue stories.)

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