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Two arrested in alleged sale of body parts at UCLA

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  • Two arrested in alleged sale of body parts at UCLA

    Two arrested in alleged sale of body parts at UCLA

    The Associated Press
    March 8, 2004, Monday, BC cycle

    LOS ANGELES

    Two people, including the man who oversees the cadaver program at the
    University of California, Los Angeles, have been arrested in
    connection with the alleged theft of body parts from the school.

    Henry Reid, director of the UCLA program that makes donated bodies
    available for medical education and research, was arrested Saturday
    for investigation of grand theft for allegedly selling corpses and
    body parts for profit.

    Reid, 54, who was hired in 1997 to improve the school's record keeping
    of the donated cadavers, was released on $20,000 bail. He has declined
    to comment.

    On Sunday, Ernest Nelson was arrested for investigation of receiving
    stolen property, according to a university statement. The school said
    Nelson was not a UCLA employee. Nelson, 46, was jailed on $30,000
    bail.

    Authorities would say little about the case, but Nelson told the Los
    Angeles Times that for six years he acted as a "middle man" who would
    retrieve body parts from the UCLA Medical School's freezer and sell
    them to large research companies. He said he did so with the knowledge
    of UCLA employees, including Reid.

    "I call one of the most prestigious universities in the world, their
    director gives me the protocol, I follow that protocol and they charge
    me with receiving stolen body parts?" the Times quoted Nelson as
    saying.

    UCLA attorney Louis Marlin denied that other school officials were
    involved. He said Nelson paid for the body parts he took with
    cashier's checks made out to Reid.

    The university planned a news conference on Monday.

    UCLA planned to seek felony charges against Reid, said Nancy
    Greenstein of the university police department.

    Former Gov. George Deukmejian agreed Friday to oversee a reform of the
    program, which was one of the first in the nation when it was
    established in 1950.

    The cadaver program receives about 175 bodies each year for medical
    research and education. The program first came under scrutiny in 1993
    when hazardous medical waste was discovered inside boxes of cremated
    human remains.
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