The longtime owner of a tattoo parlor in White Bear Lake was among six people indicted this week on federal charges of buying and selling stolen human remains.
Matt Lampi, 52, of East Bethel, was indicted by a federal grand jury on charges of conspiracy and interstate transport of stolen goods.
Federal prosecutors allege that a nationwide network bought and sold human remains from Harvard Medical School and an Arkansas mortuary. From 2018 through 2022, Cedric Lodge, morgue manager for Harvard Medical School's anatomical gifts program, stole organs and other body parts of cadavers donated for medical research and education, according to the indictment. Lodge and his wife, Denise Lodge, sold the remains to various people across the country, prosecutors say, sometimes allowing buyers into the morgue to examine cadavers.
Among the buyers was Pennsylvanian Jeremy Pauley, a self-described preservationist of "retired medical specimens and curator to historic remains." One of Pauley's passions is "the tanning of human leather adorned with tattoos for the purposes of mourning the dearly departed," according to his website
Pauley sold many of the remains he purchased, the indictment said; Lampi was identified as one of those buyers, also selling other items to Pauley.
"Some crimes defy understanding," said Gerard Karam, U.S. Attorney for the Middle District of Pennsylvania, in a statement. "The theft and trafficking of human remains strikes at the very essence of what makes us human."
A man who identified himself as Lampi hung up on a Star Tribune reporter Thursday, and a family member contacted by the Star Tribune declined to speak about him.
Prosecutors say part of the scheme went like this: The University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences in Little Rock had a program where people could gift their body after death for medical education, teaching and research. Candace Chapman Scott, a mortician who embalmed and cremated bodies in the mortuary, stole parts of cadavers she was supposed to have cremated. She sold and shipped some of these remains to Pauley, including bones, skulls, skin, whole stillborn babies, dissected faces and heads, and internal organs, which were called "wet specimens."