Man charged with 64 offences in Hull Legacy funeral home inquiry

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Pritti Mistry, Stuart Harratt & Linsey Smith

BBC News

grey placeholderLegacy Independent Funeral Directors Robert has receding ginger hair and is red-faced. He is wearing a black jumper over a white shirt and black tie.Legacy Independent Funeral Directors

Robert Bush ran Legacy Independent Funeral Directors in Hull where 35 bodies and a quantity of ashes were removed by police in March 2024

A man has been charged with 64 offences after a major investigation into a funeral directors in Hull in which police removed 35 bodies and a quantity of ashes.

Humberside Police began its inquiry into Legacy Independent Funeral Directors after a report of “concern for care of the deceased” in March last year.

Robert Bush, 47, formerly of Kirk Ella, East Yorkshire, is charged with 30 counts of preventing a lawful and decent burial, 30 counts of fraud by false representation, two counts of theft from charities, one count of fraud and another of fraudulent trading.

He has been released on bail and is due to appear at Hull Magistrates’ Court on 25 June.

grey placeholderPA Media An aerial picture, taken by a drone, showing several marked police vehicles outside Legacy Independent Funeral Directors in Hull.PA Media

The company’s premises on Hessle Road in Hull was searched following a report of “concern for care of the deceased”

A 55-year-old woman, who was arrested in July 2024 on suspicion of money laundering offences, has been released with “no further action to be taken”, the force said.

At a press conference earlier, Deputy Chief Constable Dave Marshall said there were 254 victims in total, of which 172 had been affected by fraudulent trading of funeral plans between 23 May 2012 and 6 March 2024.

Fifty victims were of fraud in relation to human ashes between 1 August 2017 and 6 March last year, he added.

Families have been updated of the development in the case and police have made initial contact with additional victims.

grey placeholderA woman and two men sitting side-by-side at a table. There is a blue background on which the Humberside Police logo is emblazoned. The woman sitting on the left is wearing a sage-coloured blazer over a black top and a red lanyard hangs from her neck. She has short-cropped black hair with grey streaks. Both her arms are on the table and her hands are pressed firmly on a white document. The man in the centre has dark receding hair and is looking down at the woman's hands and paperwork. He is wearing a black police uniform. Next to him on the right is a taller man with grey receding hair and black spectacles on his face. He is wearing a dark suit over a white shirt and black tie.

Deputy Chief Constable Dave Marshall (centre) said the police investigation had been “complex, protracted and highly sensitive”

Mr Marshall thanked those affected for their “patience and understanding”.

“They have always been the priority and at the very heart of the entire investigation and this will remain, and we would please ask their privacy is continued to be respected,” he added.

He said the 10-month police investigation had been “complex, protracted and highly sensitive”, culminating in a file of evidence being submitted to the Crown Prosecution Service on 16 January, which had led to the charges being brought.

A month after the inquiry began, Humberside Police said more than 2,000 calls had been received on a dedicated phone line with “a significant number… understandably concerned about the identification of the ashes of their loved ones”.

The force confirmed it was impossible to identify any of the human ashes using DNA profiles which, Mr Marshall had said, would be “devastating news for families and loved ones”.

A dedicated helpline for anyone affected is available on 0808 281 1136.

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