JEFFERSONVILLE (AP) — Two families are suing a southern Indiana funeral home where police found more than 30 bodies, including some that were badly decomposed.
In a lawsuit filed Tuesday in Clark Superior Court No. 6, Cynthia Faye Cook and Jeffrey Lorey allege that Lankford Funeral Home in Jeffersonville gave them misleading information about the remains of their daughter, Nicole Dallas Lorey.
They say the funeral home’s director, Randy Lankford, told them the company didn’t have a container in which to send her remains.
The family of James “Mike” Settle alleges Lankford gave them similar reasons for not sending them his remains.
The families' lawyer, Larry Wilder, told The Associated Press on Thursday that other families are expected to join the suit.
-
New Black music festival ready to rock American Legion Mall
I Made Rock N Roll will feature ten hours of live music on the American Legion Mall Saturday. It is headlined by Janelle Monaé and Gary Clark Jr.Katherine Legge looking to qualify for second consecutive Indy 500
This year, Legge is sporting a pink car sponsored by E.L.F Cosmetics. It's the first time a beauty brand has sponsored a racer at the Indy 500, but this partnership means so much more than that.Pacer fan's mancave pays homage to the Blue and Gold
Inside the Pacement, you will find everything from trading card — to signed memorabilia —to jerseys.New chimpanzee complex opens at Indianapolis Zoo on Memorial Day Weekend
The new Penny & Jock Fortune International Chimpanzee Complex spans a large portion of the zoo grounds, featuring three indoor and outdoor living spaces connected by a quarter mile of overhead trail.