Film, Media & TV0 min ago
Exhume
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Does anyone know more about the Exhume procedure, a friends mother would like to exhume her dead baby from 7 years ago, were not sure that she can do it, can anyone offer me any advice. Thanks
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.You have to have an extremely good reason to do this. I think it would be controlled by the Coroners office. The only cases I have ever heard of are to gain evidence in old police cases (usually murder, although murderers who were hanged have been exhumed to try and prove their innocence) or where a graveyard is about to be disturbed for some reason and this requires reinternment of bodies. On a job I was on in Coventry once we found a lead coffin from the 16th C. This had to be reburied in accordance with the Coroners instructions.
You need to obtain a Coroner's Warrant to be able to do this. There are a few reasons which would allow a body to be exhumed, one of them being if the body is to be transferred to another grave or be cremated (others are - to verify identity of a deceased, recover documents or jewellery buried with the deceased, to enable road schemes to proceed, to open an inquest or on public health grounds). I don't know if you would be able to take the body out of the country though (surely a public health risk?), only the Coroner's Office can advise you of this. Possibly, your friend may be allowed to exhume the body, cremate it (if feasible - I have no idea how long human bodies take to decompose) and take back the ashes with her. On a different note, perhaps your friend needs some counselling - she clearly is not over her grief to want to take such drastic action? Best wishes.