Title: A wife kept her dead husband's body in a freezer for 10 years and collected his veteran's benefits, police say Source:
[None] URL Source:https://www.insider.com/wife-kept-h ... vtq4MdhATyOrYVxxKU-na-Vi0TZZS4 Published:Dec 18, 2019 Author:Michelle Mark Post Date:2019-12-23 05:45:39 by BTP Holdings Keywords:None Views:145 Comments:2
A wife kept her dead husband's body in a freezer for 10 years and collected his veteran's benefits, police say
Michelle Mark Dec 18, 2019, 10:15 AM
Authorities say they found a notarized letter, apparently from the husband, saying his wife did not kill him. YouTube/abc4utah
> Last month, Utah police arrived at the home of a 75-year-old woman to conduct a welfare check.
> They discovered not only her body, but a man's corpse tucked inside a deep freezer in her utility room, Tooele City Police Department Sgt. Jeremy Hansen said.
> It was the woman's husband, who had died more than 10 years earlier.
> This week, Hansen told news outlets that investigators had since discovered a notarized letter in the home, apparently from the woman's husband, declaring that his wife was not responsible for his death.
> Hansen also said the woman collected roughly $177,000 in Veterans Affairs benefits in the decade since her husband died.
When the police arrived at a retirement community in Utah to conduct a welfare check last month, they were disturbed to find not only the body of the elderly woman who lived there, but a man's corpse tucked inside a deep freezer in her utility room.
That man was eventually identified as Paul Mathers, who was 58 years old when he was last seen in 2009. He was the husband of the 75-year-old woman also found in the home, Jeanne Souron-Mathers.
"I've been here 13 years this is one of the strangest cases," Tooele City Police Department Sgt. Jeremy Hansen told news outlets, adding, "We've never had anything like this."
He said police officers had opened Souron-Mathers' fridge and freezer hoping to find food that would indicate "some type of a timeline" for when she died. But when a detective opened a deep freezer in the utility room, he "immediately finds an unidentified deceased adult male in the freezer," Hansen said.
The police made the discovery on November 22 and initially called the incident "very suspicious."
But after several weeks of investigating, the police announced on Monday that they'd found several equally bizarre clues that might help explain the incident.