Kendrick Johnson family holds rally after filing complaint about missing organs
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- Rally at Capitol draws scores of protesters wanting answers about teen's death
- Kendrick Johnson was found dead in a gym mat at his high school in January
- Family demands investigation into why their son's body was stuffed with newspaper
- Family: Autopsy showed "all of our son's inner organs, including his brain, were missing"
The "Who Killed K.J." rally, had several scheduled speakers, according to a news release
from the Johnson family, but the Rev. Al Sharpton and the Rev. Joseph
Lowery -- both of whom were slated to address the demonstrators, the
family said -- never spoke. That didn't stop more than 10 protesters
from assembling at the Capitol before noon.
Johnson was found dead in a rolled-up gym mat at his high school in Valdosta, Georgia, on January 11. The Georgia Bureau of Investigation
conducted an autopsy and ruled the death accidental, but his family
questioned the ruling and had his body exhumed for a second autopsy.
At the second autopsy, it
was discovered his organs were missing and his body cavity was filled
with newspapers, contrary to industry practice.
Gov. Nathan Deal's office
did not respond to questions about whether Deal had faith in the local
investigation into Johnson's death or the subsequent GBI autopsy. Asked
whether Deal would call for a special investigation, spokeswoman Sasha
Dlugolenski said, "We have been told that the U.S. Attorney's Office is
looking into the case.
"This is such a tragedy, and we extend our deepest sympathy to this young man's family and friends. It is our hope that the U.S. Attorney's Office will be able to shed some light on the situation."
Michael Moore, the U.S. attorney for the Middle District of Georgia, said in October that federal authorities would investigate the circumstances behind Kendrick Johnson's death.
The family's complaint, filed Tuesday with the Georgia Board of Funeral Service,
a division of the secretary of state's office, alleges that when
Johnson's body was exhumed for a second autopsy, "all of our son's inner
organs, including his brain, were missing."
William Anderson, a
pathologist hired by the Johnson family's attorney, further told the
family "that our son was stuffed with newspaper. At no time did we ever
authorize the removal of our son's inner organs for any purpose
whatsoever," the complaint says.
Harrington Funeral Home,
which embalmed Kendrick Johnson and handled the funeral arrangements
and burial, never informed the family the organs were missing, and the
GBI said it replaced all of the organs after the autopsy, the complaint
alleges.
Funeral home director
Antonio Harrington initially said "one or two organs might be missing,"
according to the complaint, but in an October 4 letter to the family's
attorney, C.B. King Jr., Harrington said the organs had been "destroyed"
and "discarded ... before the body was sent back to Valdosta," where
the funeral home took custody of the body.
"It is our belief that
Mr. Harrington, at best, misled us as to the condition of our son's
body, and at worse, is responsible for the removal and destruction of
his organs, and, thus, desecration of our son's body," the complaint
says.
The family concludes by
requesting an investigation and alleging that Harrington engaged in
fraud by misleading the family into believing Kendrick Johnson's remains
were intact and "facilitated a coverup" that deprived pathologists of
"the means by which to determine how he may have died," the complaint
says.
The funeral home has not
commented to CNN in the past, but Harrington said in the October letter
to the Johnsons' attorney that the prosector -- an agent who prepares
bodies for pathological examination -- discarded the organs. Harrington never received them, he wrote.
The secretary of state's office confirmed receiving the Johnsons' complaint Tuesday, but would not comment.
The Georgia Board of
Funeral Service says all investigations are confidential, but after a
formal hearing, several resolutions are possible: It can close the probe
and take no action; it can issue a "letter of concern," which won't be
made public; it can issue a public inspection report; or it can publicly
or privately handle any violation with the funeral home.
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