Former Colorado Funeral Home Owner Sentenced to 30 Years in Decomposing Bodies Scandal

Former Colorado funeral home owner Carie Hallford was sentenced to 30 years in prison for her role in hiding nearly 200 decomposing bodies, a case that forced statewide regulatory reforms in the funeral industry. Victims’ families received fake ashes while bodies were left to rot.

• Carie Hallford receives 30-year state prison sentence for helping hide nearly 200 bodies

• Case prompted major regulatory changes in Colorado’s previously unregulated funeral industry

• Ex-husband Jon Hallford previously sentenced to 40 years on corpse abuse charges

• Victims’ families received fake ashes while bodies were left to decompose

• Prosecutor describes Carie Hallford as the one who “fed the monster”

Colorado Springs, Colorado — A former funeral home owner who helped conceal nearly 200 decomposing bodies at facilities in Colorado Springs and Penrose was sentenced to 30 years in prison Friday, closing a disturbing chapter in a case that exposed deep flaws in the state’s funeral industry oversight.

Carie Hallford faced 25 to 35 years under a state plea agreement. She was sentenced last month to 18 years in a related federal fraud case, where she claimed she was a victim of abuse and manipulation in her marriage. Her ex-husband, Jon Hallford, received 40 years on corpse abuse charges in February, during a hearing where grieving relatives called him a “monster.”

Carie Hallford served as the public face of their Return to Nature funeral home, interacting with bereaved families in Colorado Springs, while Jon Hallford handled much of the physical work, including at the second location in Penrose. Authorities discovered bodies piled throughout a bug-infested building in Penrose in 2023 after neighbors complained about a foul odor.

One victim’s daughter, Tanya Wilson, told the court that her family released what they believed were her mother’s ashes from a boat in Hawaii. In reality, the body had been left lying in toxic fluids on the floor of the Hallfords’ makeshift mortuary. Like other customers, the family received fake ashes instead of the cremated remains they were promised. Wilson described how the family had carefully prepared her mother’s body — brushing her hair, applying moisturizer, and dressing her in special clothes — only for Carie Hallford to “annihilate that dignity.”

Before sentencing, Carie Hallford apologized, saying she was raised to know right from wrong but had lost herself. Fighting back tears, she described her marriage as “a convoluted web of lies, deceit and abuse,” adding that while her ex-husband was not a monster, he deserved punishment.

Prosecutors alleged the couple’s actions were driven by greed. They charged more than $1,200 per customer while spending on luxury items that could have covered proper cremations many times over. The case stood out as the most egregious among multiple scandals involving Colorado funeral homes.

The discovery of the corpses in Penrose spurred Colorado lawmakers to pass reforms. The state, previously the only one without funeral home regulations, now requires routine inspections and a licensing system for funeral directors. Subsequent inspections uncovered additional problems, including 24 decomposing bodies found at a Pueblo County funeral home last year.

In court, Carie Hallford’s attorney highlighted her difficult circumstances, while Chief Deputy District Attorney Rachael Powell emphasized her central role. “She solicited bodies and took the checks. She fed Jon the bodies,” Powell said, describing Carie as the one who manipulated clients with a smile while knowing the truth.

The couple divorced after their arrests. Their state sentences will run concurrently with federal terms, though some victims’ families have called the plea agreements too lenient. Both have appealed their sentences.

This heartbreaking case has led to meaningful change in an industry that desperately needed it, offering some measure of accountability for families whose loved ones were so profoundly disrespected.