Divorce feud leads to disaster for cryopreserved humans
Posted: Fri Sep 10, 2021 4:57 pm
In 2006, a married Russian couple (Valéria Udalova and Danila Medvedev) founded a cryopreservation company called "KrioRus." Since then, dozens of people's corpses have been frozen and stored at the company's facility near Moscow.
The founders got divorced recently, and the woman started a separate cryopreservation company in Tver. A dispute over how their jointly owned assets should be divided in light of their divorce boiled over this week when the ex-wife and a team of people she hired raided the KrioRus facility, stole the cryopreserved people, and tried to move them to her new facility in Tver.
“[They] entered a cryogenics warehouse, cut a part of the hangar wall with an autogenous torch, drained most of the nitrogen from the Dewar vessels, they carried them horizontally along with the patients in two cars and tried to carry them away in the direction of a still unfinished cryogenics warehouse in Tver."
The ex-husband called the police, who intercepted the trucks carrying the frozen corpses, and forced them to turn back. The ex-wife is at large, but may still have some frozen brains in her possession. The corpses may have been damaged during the ordeal.
https://marketresearchtelecast.com/two- ... se/151130/
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/articl ... n-lab.html
The founders got divorced recently, and the woman started a separate cryopreservation company in Tver. A dispute over how their jointly owned assets should be divided in light of their divorce boiled over this week when the ex-wife and a team of people she hired raided the KrioRus facility, stole the cryopreserved people, and tried to move them to her new facility in Tver.
“[They] entered a cryogenics warehouse, cut a part of the hangar wall with an autogenous torch, drained most of the nitrogen from the Dewar vessels, they carried them horizontally along with the patients in two cars and tried to carry them away in the direction of a still unfinished cryogenics warehouse in Tver."
The ex-husband called the police, who intercepted the trucks carrying the frozen corpses, and forced them to turn back. The ex-wife is at large, but may still have some frozen brains in her possession. The corpses may have been damaged during the ordeal.
https://marketresearchtelecast.com/two- ... se/151130/
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/articl ... n-lab.html