Putting a Price on the American Body

One of our most disturbing businesses in the USA reveals some alarming trends about how the living are treated.

Valentine Wiggin
3 min readNov 6, 2022
Two workers in yellow Hazmat suits transporting a body in a white bag on a stretcher while surrounded by cars
Source: Isaac Quesada on Unsplash

In 2015, you begin to hear complaints of a “mysterious stench” and “odd activity in the courtyard” at a research facility near Las Vegas, Nevada. You know they work with the dead, so this shouldn’t be out of the ordinary, right? When you finally arrive, you are horrified at what you see. In broad daylight, a man in scrubs hoses off a human torso in an attempt to thaw it out. Bits of blood and tissue wash into the gutters past storefronts and accumulate “across the street near a technical school”.

This all sounds like a horror movie or the work of an elaborate crime ring, right? Not exactly. Southern Nevada Donor Services, now defunct, was a well-known body broker. It was not the only operation of its kind either. Body brokers are businesses that sell human bodies and body parts for profit. Many of these establishments obtain bodies by promising poor families a free cremation and promising that their bodies will be used for science.

Although the sale of hearts, kidneys, and tendons for transplant is illegal, there are no other laws that govern the sale of human parts, especially for non-transplant purposes. Known as “non-transplant tissue banks”…

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Valentine Wiggin

Death-positive, sex-positive, and LGBTQ-affirming Christian. Gen Z. I hate onions. She/her