- Posted July 27, 2016
- Tweet This | Share on Facebook
Funeral director gets jail time for fraud

MUSKEGON, Mich. (AP) - A former western Michigan funeral director was sentenced Monday to eight months in jail for fraud.
Thomas Clock III also received two months of probation and fines during the hearing in Muskegon County Circuit Court.
Clock, 61, owned and operated the former Clock Funeral Home of White Lake in Whitehall, northwest of Grand Rapids.
He pleaded no contest in June in separate cases of common-law fraud. One case included an additional count of providing mortuary services without a license. A no contest plea is not an admission of guilt but is treated as such for the purposes of sentencing.
In January, police found a woman's body in Clock's parked funeral van. An empty urn was buried and relatives were misled to believe that the urn contained her cremated remains.
"That family deserved the dignity of celebrating her life," Muskegon County Chief Assistant Prosecutor Timothy Maat said Monday. "They had the right to remember her for the person she was. The defendant betrayed them of that trust and ripped them away from that dignity."
Clock also was charged with fraud after a container intended for the cremated remains of a baby was found empty.
"These people were at their lowest point, the death of their child," Matt said. "He took what was already an unbearable moment of grief and made it worse."
Clock was credited with having already served 141 days in jail. He told the judge at the hearing that he thinks he's been punished enough.
"I spent my time in jail and I'm ready to move on," he said.
Clock's funeral home was not affiliated with several others bearing the Clock name.
Published: Wed, Jul 27, 2016
headlines Oakland County
- Whitmer signs gun violence prevention legislation
- Department of Attorney General conducts statewide warrant sweep, arrests 9
- Adoptive families across Michigan recognized during Adoption Day and Month
- Reproductive Health Act signed into law
- Case study: Documentary highlights history of courts in the Eastern District
headlines National
- NextGen UBE ‘blueprint’ welcome, but more info on new bar exams needed, sources say
- ACLU and BigLaw firm use ‘Orange is the New Black’ in hashtag effort to promote NY jail reform
- Lawyer accused of hitting rapper Fat Joe’s process server with his car
- Trump administration sues Maryland federal court and its judges over standing order on deportations
- Law firms consider increasing capital contributions by equity partners
- BigLaw firm lays off 5% of business professional staff