OCC cadaver leads to another body scandal
Jessica Garrison
COSTA MESA -- Orange Coast College officials who complained about a
partially decomposed cadaver led police to uncover another scandal about
the illegal sale of willed body parts.
Phillip Guyett Jr., the former head of the Willed Body Program at Western
University of Health Sciences in Pomona, was arrested Thursday and faces
charges for embezzlement.
Police and school officials believe he was selling bodies and body parts
that had been willed to Western University and pocketing the money. One
of the bodies was sold to OCC for use in its anatomy classes.
The scandal comes on the heels of a similar one at UCI’s Medical School,
where the former head of that program, Christopher S. Brown, has come
under suspicion for selling body parts for profit.
In the past, OCC has purchased cadavers from UCI. But because none were
available last spring, science professors instead purchased a body from
what they thought was the Western University of Health Sciences in
Pomona, said OCC spokesman Jim Carnett.
This fall, when OCC science professors discovered that the cadaver --
which was supposed to be completely preserved -- was partially
decomposed. When they called Western University to complain, medical
school officials there said they had no record of having sold the body to
OCC.
However, Western officials were already in the process of investigating
Guyett, the former head of the school’s Willed Body Program, for faulty
record-keeping.
Armed with evidence that Guyett also may have been selling cadavers
willed to the university on the side, Western officials contacted the
Pomona Police Department on Wednesday. Officers then obtained a search
warrant for Guyett’s residence in Corona.
What they found was the stuff of suspense-thriller movies: invoices and
paperwork indicating Guyett was in the body-selling business, as well as
surgical tools and medical paraphernalia. Police also found body parts,
including remains of human skulls, and, in a standing freezer, what
appeared to be a human heart and vials of blood.
Pomona police arrested Guyett on Thursday. He was arrested on suspicion
of embezzlement, as well as a multitude of health and safety code
violations.
Back at OCC, Carnett said he does not believe the scandal will affect
science classes at the school -- one of only a handful of community
colleges in the state that offers anatomy students the opportunity to
dissect actual human cadavers.
At any given time, OCC usually has “about eight or nine cadavers,” said
Carnett.
College officials typically purchase the bodies from medical schools at
UC San Diego and UCI, which they keep for a few years and then cremate
and return to the families.
Because they had never before purchased a body from Western University,
OCC officials were not suspicious when they were asked to send a check to
a company called IDK Information Services, the name Guyett was using for
his personal body-selling enterprise.
Western University has promised to send another body to replace the one
that was improperly preserved, said Carnett.
“We treat these bodies with respect,” said Carnett. “Our students realize
that these are human beings.”
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