Prosecutors Say Barry Morphew Authorized Suzanne’s Cremation Before They Seized Her Remains as Evidence
New court filings in Colorado say Barry Morphew, who is charged with murdering his wife Suzanne, personally authorized the release and cremation of her remains in late January 2026, prompting prosecutors to rush in and seize the body as material evidence before the cremation could occur. According to the filings, Morphew signed paperwork on Jan. 29 to transfer Suzanne’s remains from the El Paso County Coroner’s Office to Swan-Law Funeral Directors in Colorado Springs, and law enforcement obtained a search warrant on Feb. 18 and took custody the next day after learning cremation was set for Feb. 20. Suzanne’s daughters, Macy and Mallory, had moved to compel release of their mother’s remains so they could hold a funeral, accusing the state of "outrageous" interference, but withdrew that motion on Thursday after prosecutors disclosed the cremation timeline and their evidence concerns. Prosecutors argue the remains are critical to pending scientific testing and expert analysis ahead of Morphew’s October trial, while defense counsel has not taken a formal position on release of the body. The clash highlights how homicide evidence rules can collide with grieving families’ wishes, and raises questions about why a defendant in a pending murder case would sign off on cremation before evidentiary disputes are resolved.
📌 Key Facts
- Barry Morphew was re-indicted for Suzanne Morphew’s murder in June 2025 and pleaded not guilty in January 2026, with trial set for October.
- Court documents say Morphew signed for the release of Suzanne’s remains from the El Paso County Coroner’s Office to Swan-Law Funeral Directors on Jan. 29, 2026, and paid for cremation.
- Law enforcement obtained a warrant on Feb. 18, 2026, seized the remains on Feb. 19 after learning cremation was scheduled for the next day, and later secured a Feb. 24 warrant for related documents, including cremation authorization forms bearing Morphew’s signature.
📊 Relevant Data
In intimate partner homicides among women aged 18 and older from 2018-2021, Non-Hispanic Black women comprised 29.9% of victims, while representing 13.4% of the U.S. female population.
In 2021, approximately 65% of intimate partner homicide victims were female, with females being murdered by an intimate partner at a rate 5 times higher than males.
Female Murder Victims and Victim-Offender Relationship, 2021 — Bureau of Justice Statistics
In 2019, 81% of White murder victims were killed by White offenders, and 91% of Black murder victims were killed by Black offenders.
Race and crime in the United States — Wikipedia (citing FBI data)
Since 2012, there have been more than 660 no-body murder prosecutions in the United States with an 86% conviction rate.
How prosecutors won rare, no-body homicide case following 2019 disappearance — InvestigateTV
In 2018, the conviction rate for defendants charged with murder in U.S. state courts was approximately 70%.
Conviction rate — Wikipedia (citing Bureau of Justice Statistics)
📰 Source Timeline (1)
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