Body Bags with Joseph Scott Morgan: Bodies in the Medical School Basement
Crime Stories with Nancy Grace
iHeartPodcasts and CrimeOnline
4.2 • 8.1K Ratings
🗓️ 8 December 2024
⏱️ 49 minutes
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Summary
In the summer of 1989, a construction crew working in the basement of a building at the Medical College of Georgia in Augusta stumbled across thousands of human bones. The acquisition and disposal of the remains has been kept secret.
It happens again in 1994, a crew discovered an old well containing human remains while constructing a new medical sciences building on the campus of the Medical College of Virginia (MCV) at Virginia Commonwealth University. The well is called the Limb Pit.
It happened one more time at Harvard in 1999. During renovations at Harvard’s Holden Chapel in 1999, a worker operating a mini bulldozer stumbled across human remains when his machine broke through a wall into an old well.
Joseph Scott Morgan explains how it's possible to find human bones that have been hacked, cut with a saw, chisel, or knife, and then hidden so the law can't find them.....and it isn't a crime.
Transcript Highlight
00:00.01 Introduction
04:35.58 Resurrection - Grave Robbing 09:40.88 Studying medicine, finding bones
14:08.17 Doctors who have never dissected a body
19:18.35 Bones used by medical schools
23:17.45 Medical college paying grave robbers
28:16.99 Getting rid of bones without getting caught 32:11.18 Doctors had no opportunity to study the human body
38:59.35 The Limb Pit - Chris Baker MCV
40:17.79 Harvard had name for club that dug up bodies
44:00.58 Mass burial of bones, no names
47:27.15 Conclusion
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | Bodybacks with Joseph Scott Moore. |
| 0:05.5 | Since I was a small child, I have attended church. |
| 0:11.0 | Now, I've been a member of many different denominations, as I'm sure some of you have out there. |
| 0:16.6 | It's been, to say that it's a journey is probably an understatement. |
| 0:22.1 | However, in my experience, there was something that was consistent all the way through. |
| 0:29.2 | And that is that I was always taught that on the third day, Christ arose from the grave. |
| 0:38.7 | And the term that is always applied to that event is the resurrection. |
| 0:47.8 | I think that we could all agree that that's a seminal event in human history. |
| 0:53.3 | However, today I want to apply that term to another individual, a term that he actually went by. |
| 1:05.4 | And as a matter of fact, many of the people from around the world that were in the same field |
| 1:13.5 | as the gentleman were referred to as these, by these titles. |
| 1:19.0 | The term is resurrectionist. |
| 1:22.9 | Isn't that an odd term? |
| 1:24.9 | Does that mean that this individual himself was resurrected? Oh, no. That's not what it meant. |
| 1:31.5 | For this individual, actually went out and opened graves. And he didn't actually resurrect the dead, |
| 1:40.9 | but he did, in fact, remove them from their eternal resting spots. |
| 1:50.6 | I'm Joseph Scott Morgan and this is body bags. |
| 1:58.4 | I'm back together with my buddy, Dave Mack, and I'm telling, I got to tell you, my friends, listen, if it wasn't for Dave, I would not be doing this episode because he has been really jazzed about this, about this topic, because it is kind of like Dave. |
| 2:23.7 | Dave, you don't really know Dave. |
| 2:25.3 | Dave's a bit quirky, you know, which is cool, you know, that's why I dig in so much. |
| 2:29.9 | Quirk is a nice way of saying somebody's really weird. |
| 2:32.9 | No, no, no. |
... |
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