Hoarder hoarding mummified body

kana_marie

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San Francisco fire officials removed a body Saturday evening from a home on Fourth Avenue in the Richmond District, three days after authorities were alerted to debris stacked so densely inside the property that entry to the front door was almost entirely blocked.




Firefighters wearing oxygen masks went in through a front window, wrapped the body in a white sheet, and placed it onto a gurney before carrying it away.


“It’s mummified, lightweight, wrapped in a blanket,†one of the firefighters was heard saying to a San Francisco medical examiner’s official.




Mummified Body Found Inside SF Home
San Francisco police, fire and medical examiner’s officials all declined to comment on the case Saturday night.


Neighbors described how authorities first visited the home on Tuesday. What they found behind the closed curtains at 152 Fourth Ave. was a mess so extensive, “It was 'Hoarders 101,’ or even worse than the TV show,†said one neighbor, who declined to be named.


A homemaker who lives two doors away said a woman named Carolyn lived at the home with her elderly mother and with a dog that she took for daily walks. The mother had not been seen for several years.




The homemaker, who also declined to be identified, said a man living in an in-law unit at the house was informed on Tuesday that the property was in foreclosure and that the younger women — Carolyn — would be taken to a hospital.


Authorities did not identify the residents and would not confirm if the body removed from the home was that of the elderly mother.


Another neighbor, a lawyer who would identify himself only as Michael, said employees from the city’s Department of Public Works arrived Wednesday and began removing debris from the home, filling several trash bins before seeking assistance.


“A police officer outside the house told me they’d found rats, black widow spiders, 300 bottles of urine and mold on the walls and they felt they were in over their heads,†he said. A professional debris removal team was called in, he said.


The home, built in 1904, is listed as being owned by Anna and Archibald Ragin. A man who works at Third Avenue Market in the neighborhood said Archibald Ragin died years ago. The man, who identified himself only as Tony, said Carolyn told him she was a retired Pacific Bell worker. For years, she came in daily to buy snacks, but she stopped about a year ago. When he saw her recently on the street, she had become thin and told him she was very sick and didn’t want him to catch what she had, he recalled.


“I feel really sad for her,†he said, adding that if anyone had known her plight, “we would have helped her.â€


Carolyne Zinko is a San Francisco Chronicle staff writer. E-mail: czinko@sfchronicle.com
 
Wow.. I wonder if the hoarding kept her from getting help when her mother died? I hope she gets the help she needs now..
 
This news somehow makes me remember the story entitled "A Rose for Emily" by William Faulkner about a widow who was also hoarding her husband's dead body in their home. It's a bit disturbing, actually. And yes, I hope Carolyn would be able to get some help now.
 
I heard problems about hoarding, even about letting go of deceased relatives/friends/etc, but to keep a body? Ugh.

Talk about letting go issues.
 
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