Funeral home owners, Jon and Carie Hallford, pleaded guilty Friday after letting 189 bodies decay in a decrepit building, fooling the loved ones of the deceased into believing that they were cremated.
According to Denver 7, Jon and Carie Hallford’s plea of guilty to corpse abuse was accepted by the judge; however, the judge reserves judgment on whether to accept the agreement that accompanies the ...
Jon and Carie Hallford, who own the Return to Nature Funeral Home, began storing bodies in a decrepit building near Colorado Springs as far back as 2019 and gave families dry concrete in place of ...
The judgment is unlikely to be paid out since the owners, Jon and Carie Hallford, have been in financial trouble for years. They also face hundreds of criminal charges in separate state and federal ...
In a courtroom packed with families of the deceased, FBI Agent Andrew Cohen detailed that Jon and Carie Hallford used payments from the families to buy two vehicles — a GMC Yukon and an Infiniti ...
A Colorado judge reduced the bond of Return to Nature Funeral Home co-owner Jon Hallford from $2 million to $100,000. Hallford faces multiple charges including theft, money laundering and abuse of a ...
Return to Nature Funeral Home co-owner, Jon Hallford, has been released on bond, igniting concerns among the families of nearly 200 bodies found improperly stored at the Penrose location.