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View Full Version : Woman ‘sucked into parents’ grave’ suing Long Island cemetery



Teh One Who Knocks
03-18-2019, 11:09 AM
By Dean Balsamini - The New York Post


https://i.imgur.com/UElXBvJ.jpg

A woman visiting her parents’ Long Island burial plot descended into more than despair — she sank hip-deep into their grave, a lawsuit claims.

In the real-life horror show, Joanne Cullen bent down to fix a bow on a wreath by the headstone when a sinkhole formed and began to “swallow” her up, according to court papers.

“It caused her to fall forward and smash her head on the tombstone,” cracking a tooth, her lawyer, Joseph Perrini, told The Post.

She then tried to “bounce back and she started sinking into the ground and grabbed the sides of the tombstone,” he said.

The stunned North Bellmore, LI woman cried out for help, but no one in the graveyard could hear her screams.

The creepy calamity occurred at dusk on Dec. 19, 2016.

“Getting sucked into your parents’ grave when you go to visit them on a cool December afternoon with the sun going down … it’s terrifying and traumatizing,” the lawyer said.

Now it’s the St. Charles Resurrection Cemetery administrators’ turn to shiver in fear — after being hit by Cullen’s $5 million lawsuit in Queens Supreme Court.

The 64-year-old says the chilling incident in the Farmingdale, LI graveyard — the final resting place of her bookkeeper mother, Evelyn, and roofer father, John — has left her an emotional wreck.

“I will never go back there again,” Cullen said through her attorney, adding she now fears walking in open fields and “has nightmares” and headaches. She also needs counseling now, the suit claims.

Perrini contends that gravediggers who backfilled an adjacent grave to Cullen’s parents left an underground void that caused Cullen to sink into the netherworld.

“It’s outrageous that this should happen to anybody,” the attorney said. “We want to make sure the cemetery and employees learn from this. We want to make sure this doesn’t happen to anyone else.”

Cullen is suing St. John’s Cemetery Corp. — an arm of the Catholic Church’s Brooklyn Diocese — which manages St. Charles Resurrection. The cemetery is the final resting place for Oscar-nominated actor Vincent Gardenia and Wimbledon men’s doubles champion Vitas Gerulaitis.

Hal-9000
03-18-2019, 06:02 PM
Aww man that's horrible :|

Godfather
03-19-2019, 02:49 AM
My brother works for the Parks Board at a local cemetery right now... we were talking about this kind of thing just a couple weeks ago and apparently it's actually quite common especially in wetter sections of the cemetery. They work hard to pack the earth after a burial but eventually coffins can collapse as you're walking or mowing over them. Said it's happened to him and his guys a number of times. Awful experience for this lady, but I'm curious if they'll be able to prove the cemetery was negligent given this is sort of a natural consequence of burying a box underground?


Slightly off-topic but he has some of the funniest work stories of anyone I know about his time working up there. I told him he should be writing it all down and pitching a TV show :lol: There are a lot of very strange regulars up there who come all the time, combined with the usual shenanigans of a bunch of blue collar guys who maintain the place.