Buried
-
Not too far from me:
https://abc7chicago.com/lyons-il-news-homicide-investigation-police/10979576/
Investigators in southwest suburban Lyons are preparing to dig in a backyard Friday to search for bodies that could be buried there,
Excavation work is expected to begin Saturday in the backyard after two brothers said their family members are buried there.
The investigation started after the water company alerted police that water hadn't been used at the home in the 3900-block of Center Avenue. Gas and electric use had also been minimal.
Upon arriving they found a severe case of hoarding. The home contained jars filled with urine and piles of possessions throughout the two story home, as well as multiple cats and dogs running around the property.
"It was multiple liters of urine," said Lyons Police Chief Thomas Herion. "There was no running toilets. Every room, the front door, the backdoor were completely barricaded with debris, boxes."
Neighbors also mentioned they hadn't seen one of the brothers who lives there in days.
"Sunday to today," Herion said. "We know it's a million degrees in there, so started getting concerned maybe they had passed."
"They tried talking to him," said neighbor Martha Aranda-Castaneda. "He didn't want them going in the house but they needed to check on his German shepherd. They came back out right away and put on full hazmat suits."
Police said they spoke to two men who lived there, brothers, who they said suffer from mental illness. They told police they used a side window in the home to come and go as the doors wouldn't open.
"He said he had another brother upstairs who had some health issues," said Herion.
As police treated him, the brother known by neighbors told police his mother and sister had also lived with them. They also told police that their mother and sister had died and were buried in the backyard.
"Where are they? He indicated they were buried in the back yard, he said, 'Oh they got sick, they died and we just buried them in the backyard,'" Herion said.
According to police, the brothers claimed their mother, who was in her 70s, had died of COVID in 2019, but police became suspicious since COVID-19 was not detected in the U.S. until the spring of 2020.
The brothers also claimed their 44-year-old sister had hit her head and died, and they had buried her in the back yard as well, police said.