A group of people have been arrested and face federal charges in a scheme in which federal prosecutors accuse them of buying and selling human body parts stolen from Harvard Medical School’s morgue and an Arkansas mortuary.

Most of the body parts were taken from cadavers donated for medical research, but federal prosecutors also noted two instances in which parts were taken from the corpses of two stillborn babies at a morgue in Little Rock, Arkansas, according to a Wednesday media release.

“Some crimes defy understanding,” United States Attorney Gerard M. Karam said in a written statement. “The theft and trafficking of human remains strikes at the very essence of what makes us human. It is particularly egregious that so many of the victims here volunteered to allow their remains to be used to educate medical professionals and advance the interests of science and healing. For them and their families to be taken advantage of in the name of profit is appalling.”

Harvard morgue’s manager accused of selling parts from donated cadavers

Cedric Lodge, 55, who managed Harvard’s morgue for the medical school’s program for anatomical donations, is among those charged in the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Pennsylvania in a federal indictment released Wednesday.

Lodge and others are charged with conspiracy and interstate transport of stolen goods — which carries a 15-year maximum prison sentence — for offenses that the U.S. Attorney’s Office says occurred between 2018 and 2022.

Lodge is accused of stealing organs and other body parts — including heads, brains, skin and bones — from cadavers that were donated to the school’s morgue for medical research and education ahead of scheduled cremations, according to the indictment. Federal prosecutors said that Lodge often transported those stolen body parts to his residence in Goffstown, New Hampshire, where he and his wife Denise Lodge are accused of selling them.

Lodge is no longer listed on Harvard Medical School’s website as a staff member, and in a prepared statement, the school said his employment was terminated May 6.