Young Detroit resident wrongly pronounced dead and sent to mortuary after being found lifeless in her apartment.
The James H. Cole funeral home in Detroit (Google Maps)
A young Detroit woman has been found alive at a funeral home hours after she was mistakenly declared dead and shipped there by her grieving family.
Timesha Beauchamp is now in critical condition on a ventilator in hospital after she was found unresponsive in her apartment Sunday morning by her family and pronounced dead at the scene by paramedics, WXYZ reports.
The 20-year-old, who has special needs, was sent to the James H. Cole Funeral Home after emergency workers were unable to resuscitate her.
Yet mortuary workers about to embalm the body were to make an astonishing discovery – the woman was still breathing.
“While it is our practice not to comment on open investigations, we can confirm that on Sunday, August 23, 2020, we received a call to pick up a Southfield woman who was deceased,” the funeral home said Monday in a statement to ABC.
“Upon her arrival at the funeral home, our staff confirmed she was breathing and called EMS.”
“They were about to embalm her which is most frightening had she not had her eyes open. They would have begun draining her blood to be very, very frank about it,” Attorney Geoffrey Fieger, who has been hired by Beauchamp’s family, told WXYZ.
Paramedics had tried to revive the woman after she was found lifeless at her home in the Detroit suburb of Soutfield at around 7.30 a.m., Southfield Fire Chief Johnny Menifee told the outlet.
“The paramedics performed CPS and other life-reviving methods for 30 minutes,” Menifee said. “Given medical readings and the condition of the patient, it was determined at that time that she did not have signs of life.”
As no foul play was involved, the Southfield Police Department simply informed the Oakland County Medical Examiner’s Office of the findings. An on-duty forensic pathologist at the coroner’s office then released the body to the woman’s family so that they could arrange for it be picked up by a funeral home of their choice.
However, later that day the funeral home called the fire department to tell them the woman was still alive.
“They did the normal medical interventions and that’s when the funeral home told them that she was to be embalmed and all that,” Detroit Fire Department Deputy Commissioner Dave Fornell told ABC. “It kind of surprised us. We couldn’t believe it.”
“I talked to our medical people and they said she was breathing, she had a decent heart rate, she had decent blood-oxygen,” Fornell said. “But she was definitely alive when we got there.”
Fieger, the family’s attorney, said the 1.5 hours Beauchamp lost by being wrongly sent to the funeral home instead of a hospital may have a critical impact on her chances of recovery.
“What did this delay do in terms of Timesha’s health for the rest of her life,” he told WXYZ.
A Wisconsin judge is at the center of a growing national debate after being arrested by the FBI for allegedly helping an undocumented immigrant evade ICE agents.
Whistleblower says a female co-worker faked documents, experimented on dismembered limbs, and cremated the remains at a North Austin mortuary.
Pennsylvania nutrition director finds herself in deep trouble after turning a convenience store cooler into an unlicensed restroom.
Cops are hunting a Bronx man accused of one of the most disturbing subway crimes in recent memory – and that’s saying something.
It’s the high-class hooker scandal shaking Boston’s elite—34 well-heeled men, including doctors, executives, and a city councilor, unmasked as alleged johns in a secret luxury sex ring stretching from Cambridge to D.C.
When Clint Bonnell told his wife he was leaving her for another woman, prosecutors say she had a deadly – and messy – response.
This website uses cookies.