A Colorado woman at the center of a gruesome funeral home scandal is asking a judge for mercy, arguing she was trapped in fear and manipulation as the family business spiraled into one of the most disturbing cases in recent memory.
According to the New York Post, Carie Hallford, 48, is set to be sentenced after admitting her role in a scheme that left nearly 200 decomposing bodies hidden inside a building tied to the couple’s funeral home operation.
Federal prosecutors say she and her ex-husband, Jon Hallford, took more than $130,000 from grieving families for funeral services, including cremations, but often returned urns filled with concrete instead of ashes.
In two instances, authorities discovered the wrong body had been buried.
Hallford pleaded guilty in August to conspiracy to commit wire fraud and acknowledged the couple also defrauded the federal government out of nearly $900,000 in pandemic relief funds.
Her attorney, Robert Charles Melihercik, argued in court filings that she acted out of “fear and severe anxiety,” describing her as a “scared and desperate mother” under the control of an abusive partner.
He said her ex-husband used “classic instruments of domestic violence,” including threats of self-harm and violence, to maintain control.
According to the filing, Hallford only began to see clearly after being jailed in late 2024, which cut off constant communication from him and allowed the “fog in her mind from the years of abuse” to lift.
Federal guidelines suggest a sentence of up to eight years, but prosecutors are pushing for 15, citing the scale of the deception and the emotional toll on victims.
Families who entrusted their loved ones to the business described lasting trauma after the 2023 discovery of the bodies, which were stacked so high in places that they blocked doorways.
Investigators also reported bugs, maggots, and buckets used to catch leaking fluids.
Prosecutors further allege the couple spent pandemic relief money on luxury goods and personal expenses instead of maintaining their funeral home.
Some victims have rejected Hallford’s plea for leniency.
Emma Williams, whose family turned to the business in 2022, said, “She continued to stay with the business and take advantage of us out her own greed.”
Crystina Page, whose son’s remains were left at the facility for years, said Hallford spent four years “feeding the monster.”
“She is just as guilty as he is, except that he couldn’t have done it without her bringing him the bodies,” Page said.
Hallford, however, maintains that much of the spending stemmed from attempts by her ex-husband to win her back through “love-bombing.” Her attorney said she even urged him to purchase a cremator but was too afraid to push the issue.
“Although she will be behind bars for the next decade or more, she finally feels free,” Melihercik wrote, arguing a shorter sentence would allow her to eventually repay victims.
Hallford is also facing a separate state sentence that could add decades behind bars.
Both she and her ex-husband previously pleaded guilty to nearly 200 counts of corpse abuse, with their state and federal sentences set to run concurrently.
Jon Hallford has already been sentenced to 20 years federally and 40 years at the state level. At his sentencing, he admitted fault.
“I had so many chances to put a stop to everything and walk away, but I did not,” he said. “My mistakes will echo for a generation. Everything I did was wrong.”














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