logo
Pittsburgh Funeral Home Tossed Pets' Remains in Landfill, Prosecutors Say

Pittsburgh Funeral Home Tossed Pets' Remains in Landfill, Prosecutors Say

New York Times29-04-2025
The owner of a Pittsburgh funeral home dumped the remains of thousands of dogs and cats in a landfill after their owners had paid more than $650,000 for their cremation and burial — then handed them back the ashes of unknown animals, according to prosecutors in Pennsylvania.
Patrick Vereb, 70, the owner of Vereb Funeral Home and Eternity Pet Memorial in Pittsburgh, was charged on Monday with felony counts of theft by deception, receiving stolen property and deceptive business practices, the Pennsylvania Office of Attorney General said in a statement.
Mr. Vereb surrendered Monday afternoon to the authorities and was arraigned on the charges. He was released on his own recognizance, prosecutors said.
A lawyer for Mr. Vereb did not immediately respond to inquiries on Tuesday. Mr. Vereb has a court hearing scheduled for May 9, according to court documents.
He is accused of stealing from over 6,500 customers who paid for the burial and cremation services of their pets from 2021 to 2024, prosecutors said.
'This case is disturbing, and will cause devastation and heartache for many Pennsylvanians,' said Dave Sunday, the state's attorney general. 'Our pets are members of our families, and this defendant betrayed and agonized pet owners who entrusted him to provide dignified services for their beloved cats and dogs.'
A spokesman for the attorney general's office said on Tuesday that a former employee of Mr. Vereb's tipped off the office and prompted the investigation.
The attorney general's office said that nearly a dozen veterinary practices and businesses helped in confirming that Mr. Vereb had collected at least $657,517 in fees from pet owners who were promised a private cremation for their pet, but did not receive their actual ashes.
Instead, Mr. Vereb disposed of many of the pets at a landfill whose location was not disclosed and provided customers with the ashes of other animals, prosecutors said. They did not say where the ashes had come from.
The attorney general's office said that it has identified thousands of customers from Allegheny, Armstrong, Washington, and Westmoreland Counties in Western Pennsylvania as victims. A spokesman for the office said it does not provide information about victims.
Because of the large number of customers who may have been impacted, the attorney general's office has launched a website to connect with victims who can share their impact statements and receive updates on the case.
On its website, the Vereb Funeral Home and Eternity Pet Memorial offered 'compassionate experts' would take care of the remains of their customers' needs for pet funeral and memorial services. 'Our mission is to assist families in creating personalized funeral experiences that honor the life of their loved ones,' the website said.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

ICE arrests of noncriminals spike in Pennsylvania
ICE arrests of noncriminals spike in Pennsylvania

Axios

time6 days ago

  • Axios

ICE arrests of noncriminals spike in Pennsylvania

Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) arrests of people without criminal charges or convictions soared in Pennsylvania in June, newly obtained data shows. Why it matters: The jump, which mirrors national trends, came shortly after the Trump administration's decision to hike ICE's arrest quotas. State of play: Noncriminal arrests in Pennsylvania made up an average of 51% of daily ICE arrests in early June, up from 27% in early January, per ICE data via UC Berkeley. Last month, ICE made 332 noncriminal arrests in the state, up from 70 in January. The average number of daily arrests of those with charges or convictions also increased in early June, but not to the same degree. Zoom out: Nationwide, people without criminal charges or convictions made up an average of 47% of daily ICE arrests in early June, up from about 21% in early May, before the quota increase. Between the lines: The spike in noncriminal ICE arrests nationwide came despite the Trump administration's claimed focus on criminals living in the country illegally. And it happened just after the Trump administration told ICE to arrest at least 3,000 people daily, up from 1,000. Context: UC Berkeley School of Law's Deportation Data Project obtained the agency's data — based on seven-day trailing averages — via Freedom of Information Act requests. Being in the U.S. illegally is a civil, not criminal, violation. Meanwhile, more Pennsylvania law enforcement agencies are cooperating with ICE compared to last month. 25 state agencies have signed onto deals with ICE known as 287(g) agreements as of last week, per federal data — up from 11 in early June. The agreements allow such agencies to carry out immigration enforcement and supplement federal officers, who have limited resources. Plus: Removal orders issued to Pennsylvanians reached at least 869 in June, per the latest data from the nonpartisan Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse (TRAC). That's up from 567 in January. Zoom in: ICE arrests and activity in the Philly region are raising concerns and sparking protests.

Pennsylvania cracks down on deepfakes, AI impersonation
Pennsylvania cracks down on deepfakes, AI impersonation

The Hill

time15-07-2025

  • The Hill

Pennsylvania cracks down on deepfakes, AI impersonation

Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro (D) signed a new law that defines deepfakes as digital forgeries and establishes criminal penalties for nonconsensual digital impersonation. On July 7, Shapiro signed SB 649, making nonconsensual digital impersonation a first-degree misdemeanor. Anyone doing so with fraudulent intent will now be subject to a third-degree felony. The bill passed with unanimous bipartisan support in the State Senate and overwhelming support in the House. 'By signing this bill into law, we're sending a clear message that if you use AI to defraud or exploit Pennsylvanians, you will be held accountable,' Shapiro said in a statement. The bill expands on SB 1213, legislation passed last October to ban deepfake pornography in the state. That law resulted in Pennsylvania's first artificial intelligence (AI)-related sexual abuse charges. Pennsylvania joins a national trend of AI deepfake regulation, with over 38 pieces of legislation being introduced in 18 states this year. Additionally, 80 laws were passed in 2024 to push back on deepfakes, and another 15 were enacted in 2023.

Creating deepfakes with malicious intent will soon be a crime in Pennsylvania
Creating deepfakes with malicious intent will soon be a crime in Pennsylvania

Yahoo

time14-07-2025

  • Yahoo

Creating deepfakes with malicious intent will soon be a crime in Pennsylvania

The Pennsylvania Capitol (Peter Hall/Capital-Star) Democratic Gov. Josh Shapiro signed legislation to classify deepfakes in Pennsylvania as digital forgeries, making non-consensual digital impersonation punishable by law. Deepfakes are images or videos generated by artificial intelligence, typically for malicious use or to spread misinformation. Now, anyone engaging in digital impersonation will be subject to a misdemeanor of the first degree, while anyone doing so with fraudulent intent will be subject to a felony of the third degree. 'This law gives law enforcement the tools they need to fight this digital deception, yet does so in a responsible manner, protecting First Amendment rights and preserving valid expressions of parody, satire and other forms of free speech,' bill sponsor Sen. Tracy Pennycuick (R-Montgomery) said, after the governor signed it into law last Tuesday. The bill passed unanimously in the Senate and with near-unanimous support in the House. Pennycuick has previously pushed through legislation to combat digital impersonation, including a law Shapiro signed last October to ban deepfake pornography. Pennycuick's pornography deepfake ban led Republican state Attorney General Dave Sunday to file the first charges involving artificial intelligence in a sexual abuse case in April. SUPPORT: YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE Sunday commended the new legislation and Pennycuick for 'recognizing the danger that artificial intelligence poses to Pennsylvanians. Having this law on the books adds another tool to our chest as we continue to proactively investigate and hold offenders accountable,' he said. Deepfakes pose a widespread public threat, according to Pennycuick, because they include false images impossible to distinguish from real content, which are often 'used to commit financial scams, injure personal reputations and disrupt the political process,' she wrote in a statement. 'The potential for widespread harm will only grow as artificial intelligence tools become more sophisticated and more readily accessible,' Pennycuick wrote in a memo introducing the bill in February. In a recent, high-profile case, a deep-fake impersonating former-President Joe Biden's voice called New Hampshire voters to tell them not to vote in the 2024 presidential primary. Digital scams, including artificial intelligence ones, often target vulnerable populations, such as teenagers and the elderly, as well as small businesses. Seeing a steady increase in payment app scams targeting senior citizens, then-U.S. Sen. Bob Casey (D-Pa.) advocated for the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau to increase its user protections in 2022. Lawmakers around the country have responded to these challenges by introducing over 38 pieces of legislation in 18 states related to deepfake regulation. That's according to the Transparency Coalition, a nonprofit advocate for AI regulation. This legislative push follows the 80 laws passed across the country to combat deepfakes in 2024, as well as 15 passed in 2023. Although statewide regulations have received bipartisan support from federal lawmakers, they have also received some pushback, including from some Republicans in Congress, who criticize regulations for censorship and diminishing the country's competitive edge in artificial intelligence. Republican U.S. House members originally included a decade-long moratorium on state laws regulating AI in this year's federal budget before it was eventually removed from the final bill. Pennsylvania's upper chamber is considering another bill on digital forgery regulation, which would ban the use of deepfakes in political campaigns, in an effort to improve election security. Deepfake regulation has previously faced pushback in the state legislature on the basis of free speech concerns, including a 2021 bill to ban deepakes from political advertisements. Elena Eisenstadt is a 2025 Pennsylvania Legislative Correspondents Association summer intern. SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store