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Airline Loses Corpse for Four Days!

090908aafail.jpgAfter Miguel Olaya's wife lost her battle to pelvic cancer on March 28th, he made arrangements with a Bay Ridge funeral home to send the remains to their native Ecuador. Then he went ahead to make the funeral arrangements, but when he arrived at the airport in the city of Guayaquil, he was told that his wife's remains were, uh, lost. Care to guess which airline? Good old American, which has been in the news recently for its baggage issues.

Of course, this wasn't some Samsonite luggage set that the airline misplaced. Olaya tells the Daily News his 16-year-old daughter drove to the airport every day for four days, and was repeatedly told they could not find the corpse: "My daughter was crying, saying, 'Where's mama, where's mama?'" First the airline believed the body was in Miami, but then after four days it turned up in Guatemala City, according to the Post. But by the time Olaya got his wife's remains, she was too badly decomposed for the planned three day wake. Because the casket hadn't been property refrigerated.

It gets worse. The funeral home director says the airline tried to charge an additional $321 to ship the body to Ecuador after it turned up. But then American realized that the mistake was theirs; someone at the airline typed in the wrong airport code—GUA for Guatemala instead of GYE for Guayaquil. Oopsy! Naturally, Olaya's hired a lawyer, who's shrewd enough to go after the funeral home (for improperly embalming the body) as well as American Airlines, who will likely go bankrupt before Olaya can pry any money out of them.

Photo courtesy Mike Xinnachs / WCBS 880; image artwork by mattmolnar.

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Comments [rss]

  • mocanlagunas

    Wasn't this the way Billy Crystal and Debra Winger hooked up in the film "Forget Paris?"



    "Forget Guatemala..."

    A president of Guatemala (Barrios?) made a number of buildings in the shape of Parisian ones. There's a small "Eiffel" tower, etc. So the city was sometimes called "Little Paris"...

  • John Del Signore

    All right all right, you two can pat each other on the back.

  • zstone

    Longacre is right.



    From the Post: "They treated the body like a piece of baggage," said lawyer Christopher Robles, who said his client was seeking an unspecified seven-figure sum. (Presumably from AA)



    From the DN: Olaya is ALSO suing DeRiso [Funeral Home], claiming that the body was badly embalmed and decomposed in the Guatemala City airport. (Emphasis added)

  • Future Taliban

    "Airline Loses Corpse for Four Days!"



    "USA Loses First-World Status FOREVER"



    Which of the two would make a better, more significant & weightier headline? Anyone?

  • longacre
    Naturally, Olaya's hired a lawyer, who's shrewd enough to go after the funeral home (for improperly embalming the body) and not American Airlines, who will likely go bankrupt before Olaya can pry any money out of them.

    Both articles say they ARE suing American Airlines.
  • nohateparade

    i'm going to throw up.

  • takethecanoli
  • CR

    "But by the time Olaya got his wife's remains, she was too badly decomposed for the planned three day wake. Because the casket hadn't been property refrigerated."



    Wonderful grammar.

  • Rocknrope

    "...she was too badly decomposed for the planned three day wake."



    You would think they would be able to find her given the smell.

  • NannyState

    So that was the 'thumping sound' behind the baggage carousel.

  • David

    Wasn't this the way Billy Crystal and Debra Winger hooked up in the film "Forget Paris?"

  • moorecor

    Thatll teach you not to carry on.

  • sarahlucy

    good god, that's appalling. who, exactly, are the braindead whackjobs running american these days?

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