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Autopsies for All Occasions
WITH HOSPITALS CUTTING BACK ON PATHOLOGY,
ONE ENTREPRENEUR FILLS THE GAP
BY HILDY MEDINA
Nothing
bothers Vidal Herrera more than a cadaver going to waste. "You could still
harvest the skin, arteries and heart valves," he explained. "There’s so
much good you could do." Herrera is founder of Autopsy/Post Services, Inc.,
a Los Angeles-based post-mortem firm that has carved out an unusual market
niche - performing freelance autopsies. "I don’t like it when people start
making fun of this," he said. "Unfortunately, society has a negative view
of death . . . it’s natural and it’s universal." And as the 46-year-old
entrepreneur adds, "It’s recession-proof." Herrera plans to franchise his
business.
Everything the company does, including post diagnosis for deceased Alzheimer’s
and AIDS victims, medical photography and videotaping, crime scene mop-ups
and other services, is performed at hospitals, mortuaries or crime scenes.
It’s easy to see why Herrera is in demand. While autopsies were standard
procedure when someone died in a hospital 30 years ago, they are now few
and far between - despite the fact that family members often want to know
what their loved ones died of. Further, attorneys in wrongful-death and
medical malpractice often prefer freelancers to the County Coroner’s Office,
which they believe is sometimes biased in favor of police or investigating
authorities.
For $2,000 and up. Autopsy/Post, which includes a staff of four full-time
assistants and 13 on-call pathologists, will provide a full-scale autopsy-including
a microscopic tissue report - sometimes within four hours from the time
of the request. He charges hospitals to assist in autopsies, and the same
to remove and deliver organs to medical research institutions. "Because
of religious beliefs, sometimes the family will call us at the 21st hour
and tell us the body has be to buried within a few hours," said Herrera.
"If a mortuary will let us in at one in the morning, we’ll do it."
The Los Angeles County Coroner’s Office charges $3,317 for a post-mortem
exam, which must be prepaid with cash. There is no time guarantee. "We’re
really backlogged," said an L.A. County Coroner employee who didn’t want
to be identified. "Our cases come first." Typically, autopsies that fall
under the coroner’s jurisdiction take about five days for completion. The
rate of hospital-death autopsies has dropped since 1965, when nearly half
of the patients who died in health care facilities were autopsied. Today,
only about 5 percent of those patients are autopsied, according to the
Archives of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine.
Many times, an autopsy will be performed only if a crime has been committed.
"The autopsy rate has dropped significantly," said Dr. Diana Rogers, director
of the pathology department at St. Francis Medical Center in Lynwood. "It
used to be a requirement many years ago to keep up a certain percentage.
Because of all the recent technology, doctors don’t feel like they need
them. They feel like they know more." That presents an opportunity for
Herrera, who is often called upon to assist hospitals that no longer have
full autopsy facilities.
"When the need does come up, we’ll call Vidal to helps with the process,"
said Rogers. Besides, "he’s had a lot of experience with anatomic dissections
He’s certainly seen a lot through the years." Herrera is a former field
investigator for the L.A. County Coroner’s Office. Among the investigations
he assisted was the famous Night Stalker case in 1985 that terrified L.A.
residents. "I identified Richard Ramirez’s fingerprints on the window sill,"
boasts Herrera.
The East L.A. native began his company in 1989, after being unemployed
for nearly four years because of a lower-back injury he sustained while lifting
the corpse of a woman who weighed over 200 pounds. In 1988, he took a part-time
job as an autopsy technician at the Veterans Administration Medical Center,
and pathologists were impressed with his skills. So they began asking him
to lend a hand with autopsies outside of the hospital. "At the time, I
didn’t own a car, so I bought a 1974 Honda Civic at a garage sale for $100.
Three cases later, I was able to buy my own surgical instruments," said
Herrera. "The rest is history."
Today, Herrera drives around in a white van with tinted windows and
a toll-free number emblazoned in bold black letters on the side: 1-800-AUTOPSY.
Herrera’s services have been ordered by such high-profile lawyers as Johnnie
Cochran and Milton Grimes, who represented Rodney King in his civil rights
case. Besides using his services, these attorneys call Herrera to get in
touch with pathologists. "Carl Douglas (an attorney with Cochran’s firm,
who helped represent O.J. Simpson) will call me when they have a police-involved
shooting or in-custody death," said Herrera. "I’ll assign a pathologist,
go to the mortuary and do photography." But while attorneys are after definitive
answers, many families who call Herrera just want advice. When doctors
aren’t available, Herrera is the next best thing.
"Usually when somebody calls me, nine times out of 10 they don’t need
an autopsy," said Herrera, who is known among many East L.A. Latinos as
"El Muerto," (the Dead One). "They just want to know why. I can usually
establish by the first call if it’s a natural death, and I tell them what
to do." Herrera doesn’t miss the chance to harvest valuable medical aids
when he has family on the phone. He has a standard line questions: "Did
the deceased wear glasses, a hearing aid, pacemaker, use a wheelchair?"
Herrera says he donates these items to non-profit organizations that recycle
medical appliances and give them away in Third World countries. He also
harvest organs, although he charges a fee for hat.
One of Herrera’s most profitable services is exhumations. In wrongful-death
cases, attorneys sometimes want autopsies after a corpse has been interred.
"It’s the most time-consuming job," explains Herrera, who was speaking
over the sound of a buzz saw at work on a cadaver. "It's like reconstructing
a crime scene. We have to photograph the grave site, the tomb, the casket
and the body." |