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In 2009, cemetery workers were convicted for reselling plots after exhuming over 100 bodies, with moss evidence proving the graves were disturbed less than a year before.
In 2009, four cemetery workers at Burr Oak Cemetery in Illinois were convicted of exhuming over 100 bodies to resell burial plots.
A key piece of evidence was a clump of common pocket moss found with the reburied remains.
Botanist Dr. Matt von Konrat of the Field Museum identified the moss as not native to the reburial site but common in a nearby shaded area, indicating it came from the original graves.
By analyzing the moss’s chlorophyll activity, scientists determined it had been buried less than 12 months—undermining the defendants’ claim that the crime occurred years earlier.
This botanical evidence was pivotal in securing convictions, highlighting the emerging role of plant science in forensic investigations.
En 2009, los trabajadores del cementerio fueron condenados por revender parcelas después de exhumar más de 100 cuerpos, con evidencias de musgo que demuestran que las tumbas fueron perturbadas menos de un año antes.