They Sold Green Burials but Left 191 Bodies to Decay, The Sickening Truth Behind Colorados Return to Nature Funeral Home

The sanctity of the final goodbye is a cornerstone of human dignity, a trust placed in the hands of professionals during life’s most vulnerable moments. In Colorado, that trust wasn’t just broken; it was decimated by a couple whose greed led to one of the most stomach-churning scandals in the history of the American funeral industry. Jon and Carie Hallford, owners of the “Return to Nature” Funeral Home, recently pleaded guilty to 191 felony counts of corpse abuse, bringing a grim resolution to a case that has haunted families for over a year.
The horror came to light in October 2023, when a foul, inescapable odor emanating from a facility in Penrose, Colorado, alerted investigators. What they discovered inside was a scene of unimaginable neglect: 191 bodies in various stages of decomposition, improperly stored and left to rot in inoperable refrigeration units. Some of these individuals had passed away as far back as 2019, left discarded in corners for four years while their families were led to believe they had been laid to rest with honor.
The Hallfords had built their business on the promise of “green burials,” marketing eco-friendly options like biodegradable caskets and shrouds to families seeking a natural return to the earth. Instead, the couple engaged in a systematic campaign of deception. To hide the mounting collection of remains, they blacked out windows, barricaded doors, and lied to neighbors about the source of the stench. Perhaps most chillingly, the federal indictment revealed that the Hallfords handed grieving survivors urns filled with dry concrete mix, masquerading the industrial material as the ashes of their loved ones. In other instances, they provided entirely the wrong bodies for cemetery burials, leaving families to mourn over strangers.
While families suffered, the Hallfords lived a life of luxury funded by the dead. Federal investigators discovered that the couple misappropriated over $800,000 in Covid-19 pandemic relief funds, intended for small business survival, on personal extravagances. Instead of maintaining their facilities or providing the cremations and burials they were paid for, the Hallfords spent thousands on lavish vacations, high-end jewelry from Tiffany & Company, and relentless Amazon shopping sprees. In total, they collected in excess of $130,000 from victims for services that were never rendered.
The fallout of this betrayal has rippled far beyond the courtroom. For relatives like David Page, whose family member was found dumped out of a body bag after four years in a broken fridge, the emotional scars are permanent. The case has also exposed a massive regulatory vacuum in the state of Colorado. Remarkably, Colorado is the only state in the country that does not require education, certification, or professional licensure for employees in the funeral home industry. This lack of oversight allowed the Hallfords to operate without the scrutiny that might have prevented years of systemic abuse.
As the Hallfords await their sentencing—facing 15 to 20 years on state charges and up to 20 years in federal prison for wire fraud conspiracy—the state legislature is finally moving to establish a licensing process for funeral professionals. For the families of the 191 victims, the legal victory offers a measure of accountability, but it cannot undo the psychological trauma of knowing their loved ones were treated as disposable debris. The “Return to Nature” scandal remains a stark reminder that when the industry meant to honor life’s end is left unregulated, the consequences can be truly ghoulish.