Sucked into Parents Grave!

Debi

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New York woman 'sucked into parents' grave' suing cemetery

A woman visiting her parents’ Long Island burial plot descended into more than despair — she sank hip-deep into their grave, a lawsuit claims.

In the real-life horror show, Joanne Cullen bent down to fix a bow on a wreath by the headstone when a sinkhole formed and began to “swallow” her up, according to court papers.

“It caused her to fall forward and smash her head on the tombstone,” cracking a tooth, her lawyer, Joseph Perrini, told The Post.

She then tried to “bounce back and she started sinking into the ground and grabbed the sides of the tombstone,” he said.

The stunned North Bellmore, LI woman cried out for help, but no one in the graveyard could hear her screams.

The creepy calamity occurred at dusk on Dec. 19, 2016.

“Getting sucked into your parents’ grave when you go to visit them on a cool December afternoon with the sun going down … it’s terrifying and traumatizing,” the lawyer said.

Now it’s the St. Charles Resurrection Cemetery administrators’ turn to shiver in fear — after being hit by Cullen’s $5 million lawsuit in Queens Supreme Court.

The 64-year-old says the chilling incident in the Farmingdale, LI graveyard — the final resting place of her bookkeeper mother, Evelyn, and roofer father, John — has left her an emotional wreck.


“I will never go back there again,” Cullen said through her attorney, adding she now fears walking in open fields and “has nightmares” and headaches. She also needs counseling now, the suit claims.

Perrini contends that gravediggers who backfilled an adjacent grave to Cullen’s parents left an underground void that caused Cullen to sink into the netherworld.
 
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That would scare me,it might have been the coffin rotting causing a void.The lawsuit is a bit over the top,but they usually are.
 
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That would scare me,it might have been the coffin rotting causing a void.The lawsuit is a bit over the top,but they usually are.
One of the YouTubers I follow was sued a few years back for an absurd amount of money, and one of the things he shared was that there's actually a fairly well-detailed schedule of what injuries - both physical and emotional - are worth what remuneration. It's why you frequently see jury awards pared down so much and why lawyers advise you that 4 figures is generally not worth suing over, no matter how in the right you may be.

All that aside, I'd like to point out that, at age 64, she's well old enough to have been taught not to stand on peoples' graves.
 
All I can say is, if something is sucking me into the ground, for whatever reason, I'm gonna be in a huge panic!
 
i would take it as an omen and probably not tell anyone.
 
Ronin, good to see you:). I am kind of with Debi and Armand on this one. But yeah ,you never step on someone's grave.
There was a Catholic Priest that had had a brother come and visit him from Germany.( this was on US radio) . Father Simon was presiding over the funeral. His brother said , "My God you bury your people like pharaohs.;)
So I suppose if you bury somebody in a Louisiana swamp the ground gets a little squishy.
And I think we go a little over the top with the burying rules.
 
Ronin, good to see you:). I am kind of with Debi and Armand on this one. But yeah ,you never step on someone's grave.
There was a Catholic Priest that had had a brother come and visit him from Germany.( this was on US radio) . Father Simon was presiding over the funeral. His brother said , "My God you bury your people like pharaohs.;)
So I suppose if you bury somebody in a Louisiana swamp the ground gets a little squishy.
And I think we go a little over the top with the burying rules.
Hey man. Been a hectic year so far.

Oh, I'm not saying I wouldn't panic if I started sinking. I kind of skipped that because I thought it was something obvious :)