A shipment of 18 human heads, still covered in skin, was held at Chicago
O'Hare International Airport by U.S. Customs and Border Patrol. Customs officials halted the heads for investigation before handing them over to the Cook County Medical Examiner's office. "We are involved because they can't store them any longer," Tony Brucci,
chief of investigations at the medical examiner's office told ABC News.
"We'll be examining the heads in the autopsy room today, but there is
no foul play suspected in the collection of the heads."
The heads were en route to a research facility near Chicago, but there was a glitch in the paperwork. "They were all properly preserved and tagged for the purpose of
anatomical study," Brucci said. "The paperwork just isn't properly
done."
Researchers in Rome had been using the embalmed heads but shipped them
to the United States for cremation at a facility near Chicago. "The crematory has done nothing wrong. In fact, they were just here to
hand all the paperwork over, and we're satisfied everything is on the
up-and-up," Brucci told ABC News. "We are releasing them back to the
crematory soon."
The somewhat grisly discovery apparently wasn't all that unusual.
Doctors, medical facilities and research organizations often ship human
body parts, said Brucci. This shipment raised flags because of the
paperwork problem. "This isn't as strange as it sounds," Brucci said. "People ship body
parts to universities and hospitals all the time, we just don't usually
hear much about it."
In 2010, a shipment of up to 60 human heads and parts of heads was seized at an airport in Arkansas. Those heads were intended for medical training but were stopped in transit because of improper packaging and errors in the paperwork.
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