Cemetery mess, unidentified bodies stump Tennessee officials
NASHVILLE — More than two years after the state closed a troubled Tennessee cemetery whose owner was accused of losing bodies and burying multiple people in single plots, it appears that efforts to determine exactly who is buried where have failed.
During a hearing Wednesday in Nashville, Davidson County Chancellor Carol McCoy agreed to wind down the state’s oversight of Galilee Memorial Gardens, a family-owned cemetery in the Memphis suburb of Bartlett. She heard recommendations from officials conducting the investigation of the burial ground, which was closed and placed under state receivership in February 2014 after its owner, Jemar Lambert, was charged with burying bodies on adjacent land not owned by the cemetery and stacking multiple caskets in single graves. He pleaded guilty and is serving 10 years’ probation.
Lambert left behind messy burial records and hundreds of unkempt graves that were missing markers. Relatives of people buried at Galilee have complained that they cannot find the graves of their loved ones, while others have wondered if their burial contracts of up to $1,400 would be honoured. Workers dug up a grave and pried open a casket while searching for a woman whose body was never found, investigators said.
McCoy said that despite extensive efforts to identify who is buried where in the cemetery, some of the cases amount to a “best guess approach.”


