JACKSONVILLE, Fla. – The News4JAX I-TEAM continues to learn more about the disturbing case of former funeral director, Elliott Maurice Graham. He was arrested in February, charged with grand theft, filing false insurance claims, and five misdemeanor counts of improper preservation of a human body.
On Wednesday, the State Attorney’s Office told us two additional felony charges for grand theft and insurance fraud claims have been added, and the misdemeanor charges have been dropped.
Also added is a petit theft charge, accusing Graham of stealing up to $750 from a foundation that helps grieving families pay for a child’s funeral costs.
In February, the I-TEAM spoke with Danielle Streater whose loved one’s embalming was botched by Graham.
“It was an unforgettable smell, basically it was the smell of a decomposing body,” Streater said.
Others told us Graham didn’t provide services that had been pre-paid, or he mishandled their loved one’s remains. A few weeks ago, Dale Williams said he had been waiting for more than a year to receive his father’s ashes.
“I don’t know where my father’s body is. This is crazy. It’s like being in limbo,” Williams said.
According to Graham’s arrest warrant, state investigators entered the funeral home on January 30, after spending weeks trying to get in touch with him for an inspection. Inside, they said they found three decomposing bodies infested with bugs.
The case has prompted proposed changes to state law that would give investigators the ability to enter and secure funeral facilities in an emergency -- like when it’s been abandoned.
“So the legislature saw this and now that gives us the ability when we do get a complaint and there’s a funeral home for some reason or another that is unoccupied or doesn’t have power, we can go in and act upon it immediately,” Florida Chief Financial Officer Jimmy Patronis said. “And we’ve increased the penalties that if these bad actors are operating in a way that is not in the best interest of Floridians, then we’ve got more teeth to put them behind bars.”
The bill has passed the House, and the Senate is expected to vote this week.
Graham is facing up to 21 years in prison if convicted. Under Florida law, each charge of improper preservation of a human body would have a maximum sentence of one year in prison. The felony financial crimes he’s charged with carry a maximum sentence of five years in prison.