Bones used as decor in home of Kentucky man linked to Harvard Medical School human remains scheme


MOUNT WASHINGTON, Ky. – When FBI agents searched a Kentucky apartment Tuesday and found 40 human skulls, spinal cords, femurs and hip bones inside, they asked occupant James Nott if anyone else was home. 

“Only my dead friends,” he responded. 

Agents found one skull wrapped in a head scarf and another sitting on a mattress where Nott slept. Others were strewn around Apartment No. 3 as if they were decorations. 

The grisly discoveries were disclosed in a criminal complaint that put Nott in the middle of a multistate and international trade in body parts stolen from the morgue at Harvard Medical School and a mortuary in Little Rock, Arkansas. 

Previously:Harvard Medical School morgue human-remains trafficking scheme leads to arrests in 4 states

FBI agents served a search warrant at James William Nott’s apartment Tuesday morning in Mount Washington. They found 40 skulls and dozens of human bones inside, according to an affidavit.

An elaborate Facebook scheme

The complaint and an FBI affidavit to search Nott’s home in Mount Washington − which is roughly 25 miles southeast of Louisville − says Nott received body parts from abroad and sold them in the United States. 

In Facebook posts describing the parts and their price, Nott used the pseudonym “William Burke,” which the affidavit says in a footnote was used by a serial killer active in Edinburgh, Scotland, in 1827-1828 with his partner, William Hare. Together the pair sold the bodies of their victims to Dr. Robert Knox, an influential lecturer in anatomy at the University of Edinburgh. 

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