A group of sisters in Chicago made medical decisions and then funeral arrangements for a man they thought was their brother, only to find out that he wasn’t.
Rosie Brooks told CNN she got the call on May 13.
"She identified herself as Jennifer, from Mercy Hospital, she was a social worker. She was looking for relatives of Alfonso Bennett and I told her, that was my brother. Well she said, he's here in ICU."
Brooks rushed to the hospital with her sister, Brenda Bennett-Johnson, to see her brother.
“They had him on a ventilator and they had a tube in his mouth,” Brooks said.
Brooks said their brother has a background and was rarely in touch with them, so when he turned up in the hospital it was shocking, but it wasn’t a complete surprise.
The sisters told CNN they told the nurses at the hospital that they couldn’t identify the man because he had been badly beaten, especially in the face.
"They kept saying, 'CPD identified this person as our brother."
Bennett-Johnson said a nurse told her police identified their brother through mugshots and not fingerprints because of budget cuts.
"You don't identify a person through a mugshot, versus fingerprints. Fingerprints carry everything, she said.
The sisters say the man responded to commands by raising his hand but never opened his eyes — and then he got worse.
The sisters eventually signed papers to take the man off a ventilator and gave doctors permission to perform a tracheotomy. The man went into hospice and later died.
The sisters purchased a casket, a suit and made funeral arrangements for the unknown man, thinking it was their brother.
And then… they got a phone call from one of their other sisters.
"She called my sister Yolanda to say, 'It's a miracle! It's a miracle!,” Bennet-Johnson said. "She said ‘Brenda! Brenda! It's Alfonso! It's Alfonso! It's Alfonso.’ I said, 'You're kidding!' I almost had a heart attack."
Their brother was alive and well.
"It's sad it happened like that,” Bennett-Johnson said. “If it was our brother and we had to go through that, that would have been a different thing. But we made all kinds of decisions on someone that wasn't our family."
The sisters told CNN that the man they had been caring for was later identified at the morgue by his fingerprints and police are now looking for his relatives.
A spokesperson for the hospital says the family did positively identify the man.
Police say they do not usually take fingerprints unless someone commits a crime or when they go to the morgue, for identification.