Attorney asks governor for state protection for crematory operator
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Posted 5:19PM on Thursday 8th August 2002 ( 22 years ago )
ATLANTA - The lawyer for Tri-State Crematory operator Ray Brent Marsh asked Governor Barnes Thursday to provide state protection for his client, saying he feared for his safety. <br>
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In a letter to the governor, attorney Ken Poston said Marsh's physical safety could be in jeopardy from public outrage after hundreds of uncremated bodies were found on his property in February and March. <br>
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A spokeswoman for Barnes said the governor's office had received the letter but would not offer special protection. <br>
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A spokeswoman for the governor, Joselyn Baker, said Superior Court Judge James Bodiford did offer Marsh the option of staying in protective custody ``and should he choose to leave that custody, it's his decision.'' <br>
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In the letter Poston requested that a detail of armed and visible state agents be assigned for some period of time to the roads leading to Marsh's house. <br>
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Poston said the request was necessary because the location has been broadly publicized, and local law enforcement has sharply declined requests for any protective services. <br>
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The 29-year-old Marsh has been in jail since February 17, charged with 398 felony counts, including theft by deception and abuse of a body for allegedly accepting money and never performing the cremations. <br>
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More than 340 uncremated human remains were recovered on the grounds of the Marsh family's Tri-State Crematory at Noble, near the Tennessee border. So far, 167 bodies have been identified.
http://accesswdun.com/article/2002/8/191549
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