Welcome to North Austin, where the mortuary business has apparently decided to go full Frankenstein. In a story so disturbing it would make Dr. Mengele blush, a mortuary worker has been busted for allegedly hacking up corpses and forging government documents—and somehow this horror show unfolded under the noses of both the city and state bureaucracy.
Fifty-year-old Adeline Ngan-Binh Bui, who worked at Capital Mortuary Services, now faces felony charges for abuse of a corpse and tampering with government records. And no, we’re not talking about some clerical error or a slap on the wrist here. This woman is accused of experimenting on severed human arms—injecting formaldehyde and monitoring decomposition as if she were auditioning for a horror film. The only thing missing was lightning bolts and a maniacal laugh.
According to court documents obtained by FOX 7, Bui fraudulently accessed and signed off on at least ten death certificates using the license number of a former embalmer who says he had no knowledge—or permission—for any of it. In fact, he wasn’t even authorized to issue death certificates. He worked as a crematory operator, driver, and embalmer—not a funeral director.
This wasn’t a case of “oops.” It was deliberate. Investigators say Bui sent messages referring to these experiments, including one jaw-dropping line: “Let’s use this update to monitor our experiment.” That’s not a note from a mortuary worker. That’s a sentence straight out of Silence of the Lambs.
If you’re wondering whether the local authorities are taking this seriously, a cease-and-desist letter was finally issued to Capital Mortuary Services on April 10—only after severed human limbs were used in an “experiment” and then tossed into a cremation oven like yesterday’s leftovers.
Let’s be very clear here: this isn’t just some macabre misconduct. This is what happens when you let government-regulated industries become unaccountable and unchecked. And in Democrat-run cities like Austin, the rot runs deep—literally.
The Texas Funeral Service Commission said the funeral home “failed to meet building, health, and safety codes.” Apparently, that’s an understatement. The funeral home’s operations have been shut down, but one has to ask—where was the oversight before this became a true-life horror story?
Naturally, Bui’s legal team is trying to get ahead of the narrative, releasing a polished little statement about “presumption of innocence” and how the case “involves complexities.” Yeah, sure. Complexities like: why was she allegedly injecting severed human arms with chemicals and photographing the results? Why were death certificates falsified under someone else’s name? And why did it take this long to shut down a clearly rogue operation?
Let’s not pretend this is just some isolated incident, either. This is what moral decay looks like when it trickles down into every institution. We’ve got progressive prosecutors letting violent criminals roam free, and now mortuary workers playing mad scientist with corpses. The system is broken from top to bottom, and Democrats are too busy issuing virtue signals to bother cleaning up their own backyard.
It’s almost poetic that this all took place in Austin, a city that prides itself on being “weird.” Well, mission accomplished.
If this is the future of “compassionate progressivism,” count me out. We need leaders who care more about protecting the dignity of life—and death—than about appeasing woke bureaucrats or protecting corrupt, unsupervised operators. Thank God Texas still has Republicans like President Trump at the federal level willing to hold these agencies accountable, because local Democrats are asleep at the wheel—or worse, enabling it.
In the meantime, Capital Mortuary Services is finally closed. But the damage is done, and the victims can’t speak for themselves. It’s up to the rest of us to make sure they aren’t forgotten—or worse, cremated mid-experiment again.