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Families spread ashes of unknown people after loved ones remains stolen

The owners of the Sunset Mesa Funeral Home in Montrose admitted stealing and selling hundreds of bodies and giving families the wrong remains.

Cole Sullivan

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Published: 5:00 AM MDT November 3, 2023
Updated: 6:28 AM MDT November 3, 2023

Standing on the bank of the Gunnison River, Judy Cressler hoped she'd finally find peace. 

She opened a black plastic box, pulled out a bag -- heavier than she expected -- and watched the river's olive green current carry away the ashes inside. 

"It’s the right thing to do," she said. "It’s the respectful thing to do."

The years-long saga that brought Cressler and nearly a dozen others to this boat put-in along the Gunnison does not feature respect — certainly not the kind of dignity for the dead this small group of people spreading ashes sought to finally bring. 

They once thought the remains they had belonged to the people they loved the most. Instead, the funeral home they trusted stole the bodies of their parents, children, friends and partners — and sold them. 

The black plastic boxes they carried to the river's edge instead contained a haphazard mixture of burnt garbage and cremated ashes of people or parts the woman in charge of the funeral home couldn't sell. 

"She murdered them after they died," Cressler said. "That’s what it felt like. Like they died twice."

Cressler and hundreds of other victims of the Sunset Mesa Funeral Home atrocity will never get the chance to say goodbye to their loved ones the way they wanted. 

This is how they honored the remains of people they'll never know. 

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