Burials resume at Chicago-area cemetery after plot scandal

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buy this photo Cook County Sheriff Tom Dart, second from right, looks over the grave where two burial vaults were exhumed in the same grave at Burr Oak Cemetery in Alsip, Ill., Friday, July 31, 2009. Authorities say they've found more discarded burial vaults at a Chicago-area cemetery where workers allegedly dug up bodies and dumped them in order to resell plots. (AP Photo/Paul Beaty)

ALSIP -- Burials have quietly resumed at a historic black cemetery in suburban Chicago where former workers were accused of digging up hundreds of graves in scheme to resell plots for money.

Authorities overseeing the Burr Oak Cemetery said Friday that more than 20 burials have taken place since October, although the facility remains closed to the general public while workers repair the grounds.

"It's a step to the ultimate future opening of the cemetery," said Howard Korenthal, the facility's court-appointed administrator. He said he hoped Burr Oak, which remains under bankruptcy protection, could open to visitors later this year.

Authorities shut down the cemetery in July and charged four workers with double-stacking some remains or simply tossing others in an alleged moneymaking scheme that stretched bak at least five years.

Carolyn Towns, 49, Keith Nicks, 45, and Terrence Nicks, 39, all of Chicago, and Maurice Dailey, 59, of Robbins, all have pleaded not guilty.

About two burials now take place each day at the cemetery near Alsip, with employees locking the gates afterward, Korenthal said.

He said ongoing repairs include paving roads and erecting new signs to help future visitors find their way around the 150-acre grounds, the resting place of many notable black Americans, including civil rights-era lynching victim Emmett Till.

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