I found this kind of shocking. I have to assume he must have been embalmed - that makes a massive difference. And I'm sure if she had had a non famous last name, she'd never have been able to find a mortician willing to do this.
I found this kind of shocking. I have to assume he must have been embalmed - that makes a massive difference. And I'm sure if she had had a non famous last name, she'd never have been able to find a mortician willing to do this.
California has no laws that mandate exactly when a body needs to be buried or otherwise disposed of. the room was kept at 55°.
I found this kind of shocking. I have to assume he must have been embalmed - that makes a massive difference. And I'm sure if she had had a non famous last name, she'd never have been able to find a mortician willing to do this.
There's a frozen dead guy in CO that has a full festival around him being kept frozen at home. You don't have to be rich to keep dead people in your house. I think the only thing you have to do is get a death certificate.
55 degrees doesn't really seem cold enough to store a body..... especially in CA??
We don't know what the temperature around the body was. Dry ice is, itself, -109F. It also creates an oxygen depravation zone, which probably slowed decomp. We also don't know what shape the body was in when she finally let it go after 2 months.