Family of deceased inmate whose body was returned without organs wants answers

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[The full version of this article can be found on Andscape, a sports and culture website owned and operated by ESPN. The Walt Disney Co. is the parent company of ABC News and ESPN.]

(MOBILE, Alabama) — On July 21, 2023, Agolia Moore was already in bed when the chaplain at the Limestone Correctional Facility in Harvest called to inform her that her youngest son, Kelvin Moore, had died from a fentanyl overdose, according to a new report from Andscape. He was 43.

Agolia Moore was devastated by the news. She had spoken with her son that evening and couldnโ€™t believe he died just 90 minutes after theyโ€™d gotten off the phone. Then, the chaplain asked her a question that made her even more suspicious about her sonโ€™s death.

Six days later, Mooreโ€™s body was delivered to his hometown, which is about 350 miles from the prison, Andscape reports. Because he died while in custody, Mooreโ€™s body was first sent to the University of Alabama at Birmingham, which conducts autopsies for the Alabama Department of Corrections.

But when Mooreโ€™s remains arrived in Mobile, the familyโ€™s mortician discovered that someone had taken out most of his internal organs, according to Andscape.

Birmingham civil rights attorney Lauren Faraino is investigating the case of Mooreโ€™s missing organs. The controversy has ensnared the universityโ€™s medical school, a cherished Alabama institution, which reportedly has been doing autopsies for the stateโ€™s prison system since 2006.

โ€œItโ€™s a systematic abuse situation,โ€ Faraino told Andscape in an interview. โ€œUAB has been taking the organs of incarcerated people without family consent for years now, and we have a handful of families that have come forward who discovered that their loved ones were returned without their organs.

โ€œBut so many of these cases went completely unnoticed because families donโ€™t typically think they need to do a second autopsy. Many of them canโ€™t afford it, even if they wanted to.โ€

Alabama has had the deadliest prisons in the nation for years. Moore was one of 337 inmates to die behind the walls of the stateโ€™s notoriously unsafe and draconian correctional facilities from October 2022 to October 2023, according to the Department of Corrections per Andscape reporting. Moore had been incarcerated since 1999 on two counts of attempted murder among other felonies.

During the reporting of this story Andscape interviewed two of the universityโ€™s former medical students, who say they discovered that hospital school personnel were retaining some inmate organs without family consent in 2018.

The former university students interviewed by Andscape, who asked not to be named for fear it could hurt their careers, said their complaints about the university using cadaver organs without consent led to an ethics committee hearing on the issue in September 2018. The former students said school administrators told them they had permission to harvest prisoner organs because they had a sign-off from wardens in the facilities where the inmates died.

In July 2021, a bill signed by Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey went into effect designed to prevent forensic personnel from retaining organs after autopsies without permission from next of kin.

โ€œIt was very, very clear โ€“ a medical examiner may not take an organ without family consent,โ€ Faraino told Andscape.

In response to questions from Andscape, the university released a statement that said it had followed applicable laws regarding handling organs during the autopsy process.

โ€œWe only conduct autopsies with consent or authorization,โ€ the statement said. โ€œThe autopsy practice is accredited by the College of American Pathologists and staffed by credentialed physicians who are certified by the American Board of Pathology. In an autopsy, organs and tissues are removed to best determine the cause of death. Autopsy consent includes consent for final disposition of the organs and tissues. UAB is among providers that โ€“ consistent with Alabama law โ€“ conduct autopsies of persons at the direction of the State of Alabama.โ€

Simone Moore, one of Kelvin Moore’s brothers, told Andscape that he believes what happened to Mooreโ€™s organs is โ€œthievery.โ€

โ€œYou cannot just arbitrarily open someone up and take what you want out of their body,โ€ he said. โ€œItโ€™s just an atrocious act to know youโ€™ve done that without our permission and we would not have agreed to it on any terms. We donโ€™t want this to happen to another family and it could be anyone, because everyone knows someone thatโ€™s incarcerated.โ€

Agolia Moore added, โ€œBut they just got the wrong family this time.โ€

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