WW2 veteran, 98, who died of COVID, destroyed in $500-a-ticket event

Widow of 98-year-old World War Two veteran who died COVID-19 And is furious after donating his body to science when the corpse was used to perform a public autopsy in front of a live audience, who paid $500 per ticket. portland hotels.

The body of 98-year-old David Saunders was dissected in front of a paying crowd in the conference room of a Marriott hotel in Portland, where a ‘cadaver class’ was held by a group called Death Science.

It was held as part of an ‘Audits and Curiosities’ event, whose title website describes its events as ‘for lovers of the strange, unusual and quirky’.

According to its web site, Death Science is ‘an educational platform focused on the scientific areas of forensic, medical and mortuary science’ that ‘collaborates with industry-experienced professionals to teach students from around the world.’

Now Saunders’ widow says the family never approved a ‘pay-per-view’ autopsy for public benefit.

The image above shows a live, pay-per-view autopsy conducted on October 17 in a Portland, Oregon hotel room

Dr. Colin Henderson, a retired professor of anatomy who taught at the University of Montana in Missoula, removed organs, including amputated limbs and the brain, in front of a live audience of people who paid up to $500 per ticket.

Dr. Colin Henderson, a retired professor of anatomy who taught at the University of Montana in Missoula, removed organs, including amputated limbs and the brain, in front of a live audience of people who paid up to $500 per ticket.

The event was staged by an organization called Death Science.  According to its web site, Death Science is an educational platform focused on the scientific areas of forensic, medical and mortuary science, collaborating with experienced industry professionals to teach students around the world.

The event was staged by an organization called Death Science. According to its web site, Death Science is ‘an educational platform focused on the scientific fields of forensic, medical and mortuary science’ that ‘collaborates with experienced industry professionals to teach students from around the world’.

The corpse was that of 98-year-old David Saunders, a World War Two veteran who died of COVID-19 and donated his physiology

The corpse was that of 98-year-old David Saunders, a World War Two veteran who died of COVID-19 and donated his physiology

The 92-year-old widow, who did not identify, told king-tv That she was ‘horrified’ that her husband was treated ‘like a piece of meat in front of a paying audience.’

The body was first donated to Med Aid Labs, a for-profit Las Vegas-based company established ‘to provide medical and surgical education and training for the advancement of medical and surgical innovation.’

People donate the bodies of their loved ones to companies like Med Aid Labs to avoid the high cost of burial.

Jeremy Silberto, a macabre artist and founder of Death Science, who organized the event known as the Oddities and Curiosities Expo, said he paid Med Aid Labs ‘answer’ of $10,000 for each cadaver.

According to Silberto, Med Aid Labs knew about his plans for the zombies.

The event was held as part of the 'Audits and Curiosity Expo', which bills itself as a show for 'lovers of the strange, unusual and quirky'.

The event was held as part of the ‘Audits and Curiosity Expo’, which bills itself as a show for ‘lovers of the strange, unusual and quirky’.

Real-life autopsies and human body dissections are performed in front of a live audience at the expo's 'Cadaver Lab Classes'.  Expo's October 31 show in Seattle for Halloween was canceled due to backlash

Real-life autopsies and human body dissections are performed in front of a live audience at the expo’s ‘Cadaver Lab Classes’. Expo’s October 31 show in Seattle for Halloween was canceled due to backlash

Jeremy Silberto, a macabre artist and founder of Death Science, who organized the event known as the Oddities and Curiosities Expo, said he paid Med Aid Labs $10,000 for each cadaver.

Jeremy Silberto, a macabre artist and founder of Death Science, who organized the event known as the Oddities and Curiosities Expo, said he paid Med Aid Labs ‘answer’ of $10,000 for each cadaver.

The event was held at the Marriott Downtown Waterfront in Portland after it was moved there from a different Marriott hotel.

The event was held at the Marriott Downtown Waterfront in Portland after it was moved there from a different Marriott hotel.

But the chief medical examiner in Portland said that was not true.

Multnomah County Medical Examiner Kimberly Dillio said a supervisor at Med Aid Labs told her the company had no idea the body would be used for a live event.

“His supervisors were unaware that the deceased was being used for the incident,” DiLeo said.

‘We think it was not respectable and certainly not ethical.’

Silberto later told King-TV: ‘Any concerns about autopsies have always been addressed by the laboratory.

‘Then I am not the laboratory, I am the host.’

The cadaver class was initially scheduled to be held at the Downtown Courtyard Marriott, but DiLeo pressured the hotel to cancel it.

When organizers moved the event to the Marriott Downtown Waterfront, DiLeo once again tried to persuade hotel managers not to let it go ahead. The hotel refused.

Martin McAllister, general manager of the Marriott Downtown Waterfront, told KING-TV, ‘We follow detailed protocols to protect safety…’.

‘We are aware of concerns regarding a recent incident and we are looking forward to them, but as a matter of confidentiality, we do not discuss the details of guests or groups.’

Live autopsies on Saunders’ body were performed for an audience at the Portland Marriott Downtown Waterfront on October 17, King 5 News was the first to report.

According to one of the attendees, a corpse wrapped in a white sheet was placed on a table in the center of the ballroom.

VIP customers who paid $500 per ticket sat in the front row just a few inches away.

Dr. Colin Henderson, a retired professor of anatomy who taught at the University of Montana in Missoula, removed the sheets from the body, exposing the corpse of a man who had ‘donated his body to science.’

Henderson then used a surgical knife to cut out the chest cavity, head, and parts of the corpse.

The retired professor removed several organs, limbs and brain. During the hours-long process, Henderson told audience members that this is exactly how he taught medical students throughout his academic career.

At least two attendees who watched the show told King 5 TV that Henderson was respectful of the corpse.

‘It was very instructive,’ said one attendee known as ‘Monica’.

‘It was very honorable for the man who donated his body.’

Portland resident Christine said: ‘They’re not doing anything that I would, if it were a member of my own family, I would have been upset.’

A similar event scheduled for Halloween in Seattle was canceled due to public backlash.

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