Washington Post. July 7, 2009. A National Funeral Home employee who publicly supported allegations that the company was mishandling bodies at its Falls Church facility was fired last week for speaking to the media, he and his attorney said.
Robert Ranghelli, 20, of Manassas Park was put on administrative leave
three months ago after he spoke to The Washington Post and other media
outlets about what he considered disgraceful conditions at the funeral
home. After The Post revealed the conditions in an article April 5,
Ranghelli corroborated another former employee's claims, saying he
regularly saw decomposing bodies left in the garage and back rooms of
National, a regional embalming and storage facility for Service
Corporation International.
Ranghelli was fired Wednesday morning, when SCI officials told him
to report to work. They immediately informed him that he had violated
company policies by speaking to the media and appearing with a company
van in a Post photograph. It was the same day SCI officials publicly
denied that the conditions existed and argued in letters to a Virginia
regulatory board that an internal investigation turned up no evidence
to support the allegations.
"I grew up on morals, and I have
ethics and I have integrity and dignity," said Ranghelli, who became a
father last month when his son, Dimitri, was born and was the sole wage
earner for his family. "As soon as The Post story came out, I saw that
they were trying to cover up what they did. I feel they got rid of me
because I would have still been in there telling them what had really
happened."
An SCI spokeswoman confirmed that Ranghelli was
terminated but would not comment further because the company does not
publicly discuss personnel matters. SCI officials also have declined to
release the results of their internal investigation, which they say
clears them of any wrongdoing.
David Colapinto, an attorney for
Ranghelli, said he is considering filing a whistleblower lawsuit. He
also said Ranghelli cooperated with SCI's internal probe, speaking with
investigators for more than five hours during two meetings. In those
interviews, Ranghelli reported numerous problems at the funeral home
and fully backed the claims of Steven Napper, who worked as an embalmer
at National Funeral Home and publicly exposed the conditions there,
Colapinto said.
"This is a coverup and a whitewash," Colapinto
said. "Their concern is to send a message to their workforce: 'Don't
disclose information, or you'll end up like Robert Ranghelli.' They
want to instill a chilling effect on their workforce."
The
Virginia Board of Funeral Directors and Embalmers is investigating the
allegations, and state officials have proposed new regulations that
would require funeral homes to embalm or refrigerate bodies shortly
after receiving them. Among other allegations, Ranghelli and Napper
said that unembalmed bodies awaiting cremation were left to decompose
in unrefrigerated areas of the funeral home and that bodies of military
veterans awaiting burial at Arlington National Cemetery were stored for
months on racks in the garage.
SCI has defended the practice,
saying Virginia has no law or regulation that requires bodies to be
refrigerated, adding that National Funeral Home has stored bodies in
the garage and will keep such storage an option in the future.
By Josh White
Washington Post Staff Writer
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Please click here to read original Washington Post articles exposing the mistreatments of bodies at the National Funeral Home.
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