Crime & Safety
Trial Begins In Case Of Misplaced Remains Of 'Mayor Of Imperial Ave'
The funeral home tasked with his burial negligently misplaced his remains, an attorney told jurors.
SAN DIEGO, CA — The family of Sidney Cooper Sr., warmly known in San Diego as the "Mayor of Imperial Avenue," prayed over an empty grave for more than two decades because the funeral home tasked with his burial negligently misplaced his remains, an attorney representing the family told jurors Thursday.
Opening statements were delivered Thursday afternoon in the civil case brought by Cooper's children, who are suing the company that operated the Greenwood Memorial Park and Mortuary.
Attorney Eric Dubin, who represents the Coopers, said the mishap was only discovered after Sidney's wife, Thelma Cooper, died in March of last year.
The couple had planned on being buried together but once preparations for the joint burial got underway, it was discovered that Sidney's body and casket was never buried in the plot the couple purchased in 1992.
Find out what's happening in San Diegofor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Sidney Cooper's casket was found about three months later, in another location within the same cemetery. By that time, Dubin said the family had already been forced to bury Thelma Cooper alone, against her wishes.
Attorneys for SCI California Funeral Services, which previously owned the Greenwood Memorial Park and Mortuary, are slated to give their opening statements to the jury on Monday morning.
Find out what's happening in San Diegofor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Sidney is credited with helping promote the Juneteenth holiday throughout San Diego by hosting Juneteenth events and celebrations with his family. Dubin said he owned a barbershop and as part of his giving nature, would give free haircuts to senior citizens.
"The Coopers lived their life so well. They played by all the rules," Dubin said. "And then to still get treated so horribly in his death."
Dubin told jurors that the misplacement of Sidney's remains happened because of failures in SCI's safeguards for verifying grave locations and poorly drawn maps that made it easy for groundskeepers and other cemetery employees to make mistakes.
Dubin said after the funeral that the family chose not to watch the casket be lowered into the grave. A headstone was later placed there marking Sidney's apparent gravesite and it featured a blank space for Thelma's eventual, planned inclusion.
"They had the trust that SCI was going to put their dad in the right place," Dubin said.
— City News Service