Dead Body Of A Female Stolen From A Mausoleum At The St. Charles Cemetery In Long Island

August 25th, 2010 - 8:02 pm ICT by Pen Men At Work  

August 25, 2010 (Pen Men at Work): The detectives on Tuesday mentioned that brigands have stolen the dead body of a female from a mausoleum in Long Island. The police officers have declared that these brigands broke open the doors and ransacked the casket. These macabre pilferers broke into the three familial mausoleums at St. Charles Cemetery in East Farmingdale. This burglary came about sometime between 6:30 p.m. on Monday and 7:30 a.m. on Tuesday.

In one tomb, a weighty marble slab had been glided aside and the coffer was extricated. The coffer had been detected in a smashed state. The remnants inside were gone. This data was asserted by the police force of the Suffolk County. The canvassers have uttered that they did not believe that the female’s tomb had been purposely assaulted. Nonetheless, they imagined that the crooks arrived in a readied state with apparatuses to pillage a sepulcher.
Weighty marble slabs had to be shifted in order to get to the coffer. Therefore, the canvassers deem that more than one suspect had participated in this operation. The police personnel imagine that the trespassers must have jumped over a barrier near the expansive cemetery.
The policemen have articulated that this immoral act was unearthed when the staff of the Cemetery uncovered, much to their dismay, that the doors to the sepulchers were prized open.

The departed woman in question, whose body has been pilfered, had been laid to rest 12 years ago. The kith and kin of her have been enlightened about this unpardonable robbery. Canvassers have declared that they would not categorize her. Nonetheless, they declared that she was not a household name. Deputy Inspector of the Suffolk County happens to be Robert Brown. He has uttered that she was obviously important to her family. Brown has articulated that the cadaver canines were positioned in the surrounding area in case the robbers resolved to dump the female’s leftovers.

The cemetery in which these larcenies have occurred is administered by the Diocese of Brooklyn. Bishop Nicholas DiMarzio has referred to the sacrilege as an inexplicable act. He has remarked that this desecration is inexcusable and is beyond his understanding. He has observed that he has no rejoinders as to why any person would disobey the consecrated burial place of the deceased, who have passed from this earth to everlasting life. DiMarzio has discharged his commiseration to the nearest and dearest of the dead woman in order to articulate his deep sorrowfulness and shared aims in this agonizing time.

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