A man whose mother was found among 189 decaying bodies tells the story

Derrick Johnson buried his mother’s ashes in 2023 alongside his home on Maui, fulfilling her wish of a final resting place overlooking her grandchildren.

February 7, 2026Updated: February 7, 2026
By Hunter Arterburn

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (AP) — Derrick Johnson buried his mother’s ashes beneath a golden dewdrop tree with purple blossoms at his home on Maui’s Haleakalā Volcano, fulfilling her wish of a final resting place looking over her grandchildren.


Then the FBI called.


It was Feb. 4, 2024, and Johnson was teaching an eighth-grade gym class.


“'Are you the son of Ellen Lopes?'” a woman asked, Johnson recalled in an interview with The Associated Press.


There had been an incident, and an FBI agent would fly out to explain, the caller said. Then she asked: “'Did you use Return to Nature for a funeral home?'”


“'You should probably google them,'” she added.


In the clatter of the weight room, Johnson typed “Return to Nature” into his cellphone. Dozens of news reports appeared, popping out in a blur.


Hundreds of bodies stacked on top of each other. Inches of body decomposition fluid. Swarms of bugs. Investigators traumatized. Governor declares state of emergency.


Johnson felt nauseated and his chest constricted, forcing the breath from his lungs. He pushed himself out of the building as another teacher heard his cries and came running.


Two FBI agents visited Johnson the following week, confirming his mother's body was among 189 that Return to Nature's owners, Jon and Carie Hallford, had stashed in a Colorado building between 2019 and Oct. 4, 2023, when the bodies were found.


It was one of the largest discoveries of decaying bodies at a funeral home in the U.S. Lawmakers overhauled the state's lax funeral home regulations. Besides handing over fake ashes to grieving families, the Hallfords also admitted to defrauding the federal government out of nearly $900,000 in pandemic-era aid for small businesses.


Even as the Hallfords’ bills went unpaid, authorities said they spent lavishly on Tiffany jewelry, luxury cars and laser-body sculpting, pocketing about $130,000 clients paid for cremations.


They were arrested in Oklahoma in November 2023 and charged with abusing nearly 200 corpses.


Hundreds of families learned from officials that the ashes they ceremonially spread or kept close weren’t actually their loved ones’ remains. The bodies of their mothers, fathers, grandparents, children and babies had moldered in a room-temperature building in Colorado.


Jon Hallford was sentenced Friday to 40 years in prison. Carie Hallford, was to be sentenced in April. Attorneys for Jon and Carie Hallford did not respond to an AP request for comment.


Johnson, 45, who's suffered panic attacks since the FBI called, promised himself that he would speak at Hallford's sentencing.


“When the judge passes out how long you’re going to jail, and you walk away in cuffs,” he said, “you’re gonna hear me.”


‘She lied’

Jon and Carie Hallford were a husband-and-wife team who advertised “green burials" without embalming as well as cremation at their Return to Nature funeral home in Colorado Springs.


She would greet grieving families, guiding them through their loved ones' final journey. He was less seen.


Johnson called the funeral home in early February 2023, the week his mother died. Carie Hallford assured him she would take good care of his mother, Johnson said.


Days later, she handed Johnson a blue box containing a zip-tied plastic bag with gray powder, saying those were his mother's ashes.


"She lied to me over the phone. She lied to me through email. She lied to me in person,” Johnson told the AP.


The following day, the box lay surrounded by flowers and photos of Ellen Marie Shriver-Lopes at a memorial service at a Holiday Inn in Colorado Springs.


Johnson sprinkled rose petals over it as a preacher said: “Ashes to ashes, dust to dust."


Caught on video

On Sept. 9, 2023, surveillance footage showed a man appearing to be Jon Hallford walk inside a building owned by Return to Nature in the town of Penrose, outside Colorado Springs, according to an arrest affidavit.


Camera footage inside showed a body lying on a gurney wearing a diaper and hospital socks. The man flipped it onto the floor.


Then he “appeared to wipe the remaining decomposition from the gurney onto other bodies in the room,” before wheeling what appeared to be two more bodies into the building, the affidavit said.


In a text to his wife, Hallford said, “while I was making the transfer, I got people juice on me,” according to court testimony.


The neighborhood mom

Johnson grew up with his mother in an affordable-housing complex in Colorado Springs, where she knew everyone.


Johnson's father wasn't around much; at 5 years old, Johnson remembers seeing him punch his mom, sending her careening into a table, then onto a guitar, breaking it.


It was Lopes who taught Johnson to shave and hollered from the bleachers at his football games.


Neighborhood kids called her “mom,” some sleeping on the couch when they needed a place to stay and a warm meal. She would chat with Jehovah’s Witnesses because she didn’t want to be rude. With a life spent in social work, Lopes would say: “If you have the ability and you have the voice to help: Help.”


On Thursday, Johnson held a pink Mother's Day card he had written in high school and discovered among her things. “I think I wrote ‘I love you' in there 20 times,” he said, “because how many times did I miss saying it?"


“It makes me feel so good that she kept this.”


Johnson said he spoke with his mom nearly everyday. After diabetes left her bedridden and blind at age 65, she'd ask Johnson to describe what her grandchildren looked like over the phone.


It was Super Bowl Sunday in 2023 when her heart stopped.


Johnson, who had flown in from Hawaii to be at her bedside, clutched her warm hand and held it until it was cold.


A gruesome discovery

Detective Sgt. Michael Jolliffe and Laura Allen, the county’s deputy coroner, stood outside the Penrose building on Oct. 3, 2023, according to the 50-page arrest affidavit.


A sign on the door read “Return to Nature Funeral Home” and listed a phone number. When Jolliffe called it, it was disconnected. Cracked concrete and yellow stalks of grass encircled the building. At back was a shabby hearse with expired registration. A window air conditioner hummed.


Someone had told Jolliffe of a rank smell coming from the building the day before, the affidavit said.


One neighbor told an AP reporter they thought it came from a septic tank; another said her daughter's dog always headed to the building whenever it got off-leash.


Reminiscent of rancid manure or rotting fish, it struck anyone downwind of the building.


Jolliffe and Allen spotted a dark stain under the door and on the building’s stucco exterior. They thought it looked like fluids they had seen during investigations with decaying bodies, the affidavit said.


But the building’s windows were covered and they couldn’t see inside.


Allen contacted the Colorado Department of Regulatory Agencies that oversees funeral homes, which got in touch with Jon Hallford. Hallford agreed to show an inspector inside the next afternoon.


Inspector Joseph Berry arrived, but Hallford didn’t show.


Berry found a small opening in one of the window coverings, the affidavit said. Peering through, he saw white plastic bags that looked like body bags on the floor.


A judge issued a search warrant.


Bodies stacked high

Donning protective suits, gloves, boots and respirators, investigators entered the 2,500-square-foot (232-square-meter) building on Oct. 5, 2023, according to the affidavit.


Inside, they found a large bone grinder and next to it a bag of Quikrete that investigators suspected was used to mimic ashes. Bodies were stacked in nearly a dozen rooms, including the bathroom, sometimes so high they blocked doorways, the affidavit said.


There were 189.


Some had decayed for years, others several months, according to the affidavit. Many were in body bags, some wrapped in sheets and duct tape. Others were half-exposed, on gurneys or in plastic totes, or lay with no covering, it said.


Investigators believed the Hallfords were experimenting with water cremation, which can dissolve a body in several hours, the document said. There were swarms of bugs and maggots.


Body bags were filled with fluid, according to the affidavit. Some had ripped. Five-gallon buckets had been placed to catch the leaks. Removal teams “trudged through layers of human decomposition on the floor,” it said.


Investigators identified bodies using fingerprints, hospital bracelets and medical implants, the affidavit said. It said one body was supposed to be buried in Pikes Peak National Cemetery.


Investigators exhumed the wooden casket at the burial site of the U.S. Army veteran, who served in Vietnam and the Persian Gulf. Inside was a woman’s deteriorated body, wrapped in duct tape and plastic sheets.


The veteran's body was discovered in the Penrose building, covered in maggots.


‘Ashes to ashes’

Following the call from the FBI, Johnson promised himself he would speak at the Hallfords' sentencing. But he struggled to talk about what had happened even with close friends, let alone in front of a judge and the Hallfords.


For months, Johnson obsessed over the case, reading dozens of news reports, often glued to his phone until one of his children would interrupt him to play.


When he shut his eyes, he said he imagined trudging through the building with “maggots, flies, centipedes. There’s rats, they’re feasting.” He asked a preacher if his mother’s soul had been trapped there. She reassured him it hadn’t. When an episode of the zombie show “The Walking Dead” came on, he broke down.


Johnson started seeing a therapist and was diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder. He joined Zoom meetings with other victims' relatives as the number grew from dozens to hundreds.


After Lopes’ body was identified, Johnson flew in March 2024 to Colorado, where his mother's remains lay in a box in a crematorium.


“I don’t think you blame me, but I still want to tell you I’m sorry,” he recalled saying, placing his hand on the box.


Then Lopes’ body was loaded into the cremator and Johnson pushed the button.


Justice

Johnson has slowly improved with therapy, engaging more with his students and children. He practiced speaking at the Hallfords' sentencings in therapy. Closing his eyes, he envisioned standing in front of the judge — and the Hallfords.


“Justice is, it’s the part that is missing from this whole equation,” he said. “Maybe somehow this justice frees me. And then there’s part of me that’s scared it won’t, because it probably won’t.”


On Friday, Johnson spoke about his mother at Hallford’s sentencing.


“My mother earned the right to be known for her presence and not her death,” he said. “Jon Hallford stole that.”


Colorado funeral home owner who abused nearly 200 corpses gets 40 years, decried as a 'monster'


COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (AP) — A Colorado funeral home owner who stashed 189 decomposing bodies in a building over four years and gave grieving families fake ashes was sentenced to 40 years in state prison Friday.


During the sentencing hearing, family members told Judge Eric Bentley they have had recurring nightmares about decomposing flesh and maggots since learning what happened to their loved ones.


They called defendant Jon Hallford a “monster” and urged the judge to give him the maximum sentence of 50 years.


Bentley told Hallford he caused “unspeakable and incomprehensible” harm.


“It is my personal belief that every one of us, every human being, is basically good at the core, but we live in a world that tests that belief every day, and Mr. Hallford your crimes are testing that belief,” Bentley said.


Hallford apologized before his sentencing and said he would regret his actions for the rest of his life.


“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.”


‘Motivated by greed’

Hallford’s attorney unsuccessfully sought a 30 year sentence, arguing that it was not a crime of violence and he had no prior criminal record.


His former wife, Carie Hallford, who co-owned the Return to Nature Funeral Home, is due to be sentenced April 24. She faces 25 to 35 years in prison.


Both pleaded guilty in December to nearly 200 counts of corpse abuse under an agreement with prosecutors.


During the years they were stashing bodies, the Hallfords spent lavishly, according to court documents. That included purchasing a GMC Yukon and an Infiniti worth over $120,000 combined, along with $31,000 in cryptocurrency, pricey goods from stores like Gucci and Tiffany & Co. and laser body sculpting.


“Clearly this is a crime motivated by greed,” prosecutor Shelby Crow said. The Hallfords charged more than $1,200 per customer, and the money the couple spent on luxury items would have covered the cost to cremate all of the bodies many times over, Crow said.


The Hallfords also pleaded guilty to federal fraud charges after prosecutors said they cheated the government out of nearly $900,000 in pandemic-era small business aid. Jon Hallford was sentenced to 20 years in prison in that case, and Carie Hallford’s sentencing is pending.


A plea agreement in the corpse abuse case calls for the state prison sentence to be served concurrently with the federal sentence.


Heartbroken families

One of the family members who spoke at the hearing was Kelly Mackeen, whose mother's remains were handled by Return to Nature.


“I’m a daughter whose mother was treated like yesterday’s trash and dumped in a site left to rot with hundreds of others,” Mackeen said. “I’m heartbroken, and I ask God every day for grace.”


As she and others spoke of their grief, Jon Hallford sat at a table to their right, wearing orange jail attire and looking directly ahead. The courtroom’s wooden benches were full of relatives of the deceased and also journalists.


The Hallfords stored the bodies in a building in the small town of Penrose, south of Colorado Springs, from 2019 until 2023, when investigators responded to reports of a stench from the building.


Bodies were found throughout the building, some stacked on top of each other, with swarms of bugs and decomposition fluid covering the floors, investigators said. The remains — including adults, infants and fetuses — were stored at room temperature.


The bodies were identified over months with fingerprints, DNA and other methods.


Investigators believe the Hallfords gave families dry concrete that resembled ashes.


After families learned that what they received and then spread or kept at home were not actually their loved ones' remains, many said it undid their grieving process, while others had nightmares and struggled with guilt.


Lax regulations

One of the recovered bodies was that of a former Army sergeant first class who was thought to have been buried at a veterans’ cemetery, FBI agent Andrew Cohen said.


When investigators exhumed the wooden casket at the cemetery, they found the remains of a person of a different gender inside, he said. The veteran, who was not identified in court, was later given a funeral with full military honors at Pikes Peak National Cemetery.


The corpse abuse revelations spurred changes to Colorado's lax funeral home regulations.


The AP previously reported that the Hallfords missed tax payments, were evicted from one of their properties and were sued for unpaid bills, according to public records and interviews with people who worked with them.


In a rare decision last year, Judge Bentley rejected previous plea agreements between the Hallfords and prosecutors that called for up to 20 years in prison. Family members of the deceased said the agreements were too lenient.

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