July 11, 2009 Saturday
Updated

July 11, 2009
More bones found

ALSIP (Illinois) - DISTRAUGHT families hoping to determine whether loved ones' final resting places at a historic black cemetery near Chicago were desecrated in a gravedigging scandal were met with more gruesome discoveries: additional human bones strewn about the grounds.

Thousands have flooded Burr Oak Cemetery in Alsip, the burial place of civil rights-era lynching victim Emmett Till and blues singer Dinah Washington, since four former workers were accused earlier this week of dumping hundreds of unearthed corpses in a scheme to resell plots. Each was charged with one count of dismembering a body.

But after both law enforcement and visitors came across more remains while seeking answers, authorities closed the cemetery Friday and labeled it an expanding crime scene.

'I found bones out there, I found individuals wandering aimlessly around' who also found bones and other things, Cook County Sheriff Tom Dart said. He did not offer details.

Families still would be able file inquires at the cemetery on Saturday, when an exhumation officials said was planned before the current investigation also was to take place. Mr Dart said he hoped Burr Oak would reopen to visitors within a week.

Shareese McLemore, 36, of Kankakee, Illinois, was able to visit before the cemetery closed Friday and said she fears her mother's grave was disturbed after she found grass around the plot damaged and burnt.

'I feel betrayed by the people who worked there,' McLemore said.

About 5,000 grave sites were being investigated, but Mr Dart acknowledged difficulty in evaluating the number because cemetery records either don't exist or have been altered or destroyed.

'We can't get our arms around how many people are supposedly, allegedly, buried here,' he said.

Mr Dart's office has received more than 1,350 complaints - up to 30 per cent of which allege loved ones have been relocated. -- AP

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