Oh dear, Talk about live by the sword die by the sword

hollydolly

SF VIP
Location
London England
An undertaker was found crushed to death by a piece of equipment used to move bodies from a fridge in the back room of a funeral parlour, an inquest heard.

Funeral administrator Sally Blundell, 58, had been working alone at the East of England Co-op Funeral Services branch in Swaffham, Norfolk when she was found 'trapped' in the scissor lift that was 'used to lift caskets in and out of the fridge'.

The grandmother was discovered by a colleague from another branch, who had attended after concerns were raised by a family who had a pre-arranged appointment at the funeral parlour but found no staff there.


Police officer Luke Heffer told the court Ms Blundell was found in the back room of the parlour where she was 'trapped in the scissor lift', lying across a bar and with the upper part of her body inside the frame.

Norfolk area coroner Yvonne Blake said Mrs Blundell's medical cause of death was recorded as 'contusion and compression of the chest by an external object'.

Dawn Salisbury, who had made arrangements to see a deceased relative, became concerned when there were no staff at the funeral parlour for her 11am appointment.

The lady in the picture

107356657-15671921-image-a-1_1774286457821.jpg


In a statement read to the Norwich inquest, she said that 'after about 10 minutes I decided to ring the landline number for that branch'.

When she could not hear a phone ringing within the branch, she tried calling the celebrant she had been dealing with and a message was passed to another branch.

Mr Kemp, a funeral manager at the Dereham branch of East of England Co-op Funeral Services, said he asked security to remotely check CCTV cameras at the Swaffham branch.

He said they could see two ladies sat in the reception area, who had attended the 11am appointment, and Mrs Blundell's car in the car park, but no sign of her.

The inquest heard there are no CCTV cameras in sensitive areas of the funeral parlour where bodies are kept.

Mr Kemp went to the Swaffham branch and discovered Mrs Blundell was dead.

In a statement, he said that a 'hydraulic hoist had come down on her body and was crushing her over the chest area'.

He said it was 'apparent to me she was already dead'.

Undertaker crushed to death by 'equipment used to move bodies'
 
Very sad to have an accident like that. I feel bad for her co-worker who found her. That is something that no one could have imaged finding.

I don't like hydraulics of any kind & I'm very wary when I with them.

When I was in dispatch we received a call about a man who was found pinned under his car. He had used a wheeled hydraulic floor jack made for vehicles to raise the old corvette he was restoring. He didn't have any secondary stationary jacks under the car to keep it up, so when the jack let loose, it pinned him. What was really sad about this one is that the man retired on Friday & this happened on Monday.
 
Very sad to have an accident like that. I feel bad for her co-worker who found her. That is something that no one could have imaged finding.

I don't like hydraulics of any kind & I'm very wary when I with them.

When I was in dispatch we received a call about a man who was found pinned under his car. He had used a wheeled hydraulic floor jack made for vehicles to raise the old corvette he was restoring. He didn't have any secondary stationary jacks under the car to keep it up, so when the jack let loose, it pinned him. What was really sad about this one is that the man retired on Friday & this happened on Monday.
I had a similar experience with a good friend of mine some years ago. he was working on a car just as you describe and he'd jacked it up but not with hydraulic floor jack, just with axle stands. I was right there when he was lying under the car working on it .. and the car fell of the axle stands and as it did... he made a grab for it, and whatever part of the car landed on his hand it chopped his thumb off ! :( fortunately I was there so i could take him immediately to the hospital ... I've never seen anyone look so green.. he really looked sick !
 
Last edited:
I had a simialr experience with a good friend of mine some years ago. he was working on a car just as you desribe and he'd jacked it up but not with hydraulic floor jack, just with axle stands. I was right there when he was lyng under the car working on it .. and the car fell of the axle stands and as it did... he made a grab for it, and whatever part of the car laded on his hand chopped his thumb off ! :( fortunately I was there so i could take him immediately to the hospital ... I've never seen anyone look so green.. he really looked sick !
He was lucky you were there when it happened. That could have been so much worse & I'm glad it wasn't.

As a kid, when my brothers (much older than me) worked on a car we had solid wooden blocks to go under it in case the old style bumper jack the cars came would let go ... back then we didn't have a hydraulic one. Dad also made them chock the rear tires with smaller wood blocks so it wouldn't roll.

I found plastic wheel chocks at the store & put a set in each car so if I have to change a tire I can use them to keep the car from rolling on the side of the road. It has always been my luck that I've been alone when I've had a flat.
 
He was lucky you were there when it happened. That could have been so much worse & I'm glad it wasn't.

As a kid, when my brothers (much older than me) worked on a car we had solid wooden blocks to go under it in case the old style bumper jack the cars came would let go ... back then we didn't have a hydraulic one. Dad also made them chock the rear tires with smaller wood blocks so it wouldn't roll.

I found plastic wheel chocks at the store & put a set in each car so if I have to change a tire I can use them to keep the car from rolling on the side of the road. It has always been my luck that I've been alone when I've had a flat.
I;m the same now, I wouldn't have the strengt any more to change a tyre if I got a flat....
 
That would be classified as a freak accident here in the states. What a horrible way to die. The poor lady never imagined something like that could happen to anyone in the course of a work day. :cry:
 
As a former operator of a scissor lift, I can just imagine how horrific this would be. 😲

The car i work on, weighs less than 3000 lbs and it's suggested that I use 2 ton jack stands. I take all precautions and use nothing less than 6 ton jack stands, never just the pump jack. If I'm taking a wheel off, I place that under the car as a secondary measure.
 
I have seen these lifts. The ceiling mounted does not have a scissors operation, but the floor model does. How the woman got caught in the scissors is beyond me. Most funeral homes and morgues have 3 drawers stacked on top of one another.

Take a look at the different models.


IMG_0788.jpeg
 
Back
Top