A 74-year-old woman was declared dead in a nursing home in Nebraska on Monday. Two hours later, a funeral home employee noticed the woman was alive and still breathing.
The woman, identified by the Lancaster County Sheriff’s Office as Constance Glantz, was declared dead by nursing staff at The Mulberry care home in Waverly, Neb., around 9:45 a.m. local time.
Shortly after, she was brought to the Butherus-Maser & Love Funeral Home in the nearby city of Lincoln, where an employee discovered she was breathing and administered CPR. The woman had earlier been in hospice care at the nursing home.
During a press conference, Lancaster County Chief Deputy Ben Houchin said the unnamed funeral home employee “instantly called 911.”
The call was made two hours after Glantz was declared dead, around 11:45 a.m. Glantz was transferred to hospital and her family members were notified.
During the Monday press conference, Houchin said Glantz was still alive; in an update on Tuesday, the Lancaster County Sheriff’s Office said Glantz died on Monday around 4 p.m., while still in hospital.
The county chief deputy admitted he had never seen an incident like this one throughout his entire 31-year career. He called the case “very unusual.”
Police have launched an investigation. There have been no charges, and Houchin said authorities have not discovered any criminal intent.
The nursing home is cooperating in the investigation and the funeral home is not at fault, Houchin said. Neither The Mulberry nor the Butherus-Maser & Love Funeral Home has commented publicly on the situation.
In Nebraska, hospice and nursing home facilities do not have to contact a coroner if a person’s death was anticipated and deemed unsuspicious.
After Glantz’s true death,
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