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Colorado Ex‑Funeral Home Owner Gets 18 Years for COVID Aid and Funeral Fraud

A federal judge in Denver sentenced former Return to Nature Funeral Home co‑owner Carie Hallford to 18 years in prison after she pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit wire fraud for cheating grieving families and defrauding the government out of nearly $900,000 in pandemic small‑business aid. Prosecutors said Hallford and her ex‑husband, Jon Hallford, took about $130,000 from families for cremations and other services, sometimes handing over urns filled with concrete mix and, in at least two cases, burying the wrong body, while nearly 200 corpses were left to decompose in a Penrose, Colorado building. Federal guidelines called for up to eight years because Hallford had no prior record, but Judge Nina Y. Wang sharply increased the sentence, citing the scale of the deception and the exploitation of vulnerable people, even as she acknowledged a pattern of emotional abuse by Jon in their text messages. Victims described ongoing guilt, shame and trauma after learning their relatives’ bodies were among those stacked in filthy conditions and only recently identified through DNA, with some families now having to mourn and make burial decisions a second time. The case underscores how lightly regulated parts of the funeral industry and loosely monitored COVID‑era relief programs created openings for egregious abuse, prompting renewed scrutiny online and from policymakers of both sectors’ oversight and accountability.

Courts and Criminal Justice Fraud and Financial Crimes

📌 Key Facts

  • Carie Hallford was sentenced in federal court in Denver to 18 years in prison after pleading guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit wire fraud.
  • Hallford and ex‑husband Jon Hallford collected about $130,000 from families for funeral and cremation services, sometimes returning urns filled with concrete mix and misidentifying remains, while nearly 200 bodies were left to decompose in a Penrose building.
  • Prosecutors said the couple also fraudulently obtained nearly $900,000 in COVID‑era small‑business aid and spent lavishly, and victims told the court they suffer ongoing trauma from discovering how their loved ones’ remains were handled.

📊 Relevant Data

PPP loan fraud during the COVID-19 pandemic is estimated to have cost the US government hundreds of billions of dollars, with one analysis suggesting 10% of pandemic aid was fraudulent.

Tracking pandemic aid fraud: Five years on, the toll continues to grow — The Christian Science Monitor

Cremation rates in the US increased to 56% in 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic, representing an 8.1% increase for cremations and a corresponding decrease in burials.

2020 Cremation Statistics: The Pandemic's Effect — Cremation Green

Non-Hispanic Black and Hispanic older adults are significantly less likely to use hospice services compared to non-Hispanic White older adults; after adjustments, the disparity persists for Hispanics (OR = 0.76), with Hispanics in the lowest SES group having a 40% predicted probability of hospice enrollment.

Racial and Socioeconomic Disparities in Hospice Utilization Among Older Adults in the United States — PubMed

The population of Colorado Springs, Colorado, is approximately 69.6% White alone, 19.3% Hispanic or Latino, 5.7% Black alone, and 3.0% Asian alone as of 2024.

Colorado Springs city, Colorado — U.S. Census Bureau QuickFacts

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March 16, 2026