
Harvard Morgue Boss Busted Selling Body Parts Meant For Research Learns His Fate
HuffPost
Cedric Lodge stole parts from cadavers including heads, faces, brains, skin and hands after they had been used for research and teaching purposes, prosecutors said.
Dec 16 (Reuters) - A former Harvard Medical School morgue manager was sentenced on Tuesday to eight years in prison for stealing and selling organs and other parts of cadavers that were donated to the school for medical research and education.
Cedric Lodge, who managed Harvard’s morgue for more than two decades before his 2023 arrest, was sentenced by U.S. District Judge Matthew Brann in Williamsport, Pennsylvania, after pleading guilty in May to transporting stolen goods across state lines.
The wife of the 58-year-old man, Denise Lodge, was also sentenced to one year in prison after admitting to participating in the sale of stolen human remains that her husband obtained through his position at Harvard.
Prosecutors said Cedric Lodge from 2018 through at least March 2020 stole parts from cadavers including heads, faces, brains, skin and hands after they had been used for research and teaching purposes and transported them from Harvard’s morgue in Massachusetts to his home in Goffstown, New Hampshire.
Together, the Lodges sold stolen remains to several individuals including two in Pennsylvania, which the buyers mostly then resold, prosecutors said.













