Man Charged After 108 Skeletons Stolen from Cemetery

Man Charged After 108 Skeletons Stolen from Cemetery

> At a Glance

> – Jonathan Gerlach, 34, faces multiple felony counts after detectives found 108 human skeletons in his Ephrata home and storage locker

> – The remains were taken from 26 mausoleums and underground vaults at Mount Moriah Cemetery between November 2025 and January 6, 2026

> – Some victims are infants and children; many skeletons are centuries old and remain unidentified

> – Why it matters: Families now fear their loved ones’ graves were among those desecrated, and police are tracing possible online sales of human remains

A cemetery burglary spree that spanned two months ended with the discovery of more than 100 stolen skeletons inside a Pennsylvania man’s house, authorities said.

Grisly Discovery

Delaware County investigators executing a search warrant at Jonathan Gerlach’s Ephrata residence recovered 100 full human skeletons and another eight remains from a nearby storage unit. The find followed Gerlach’s arrest on January 6 after officers allegedly caught him in the act of desecrating a monument at Mount Moriah Cemetery.

District Attorney Tanner Rouse described the scene:

> “Detectives walked into a horror movie come to life… quite literally – none of them have ever seen anything like this before.”

Scope of the Crime

The cemetery itself spans Yeadon Borough and Philadelphia, giving the suspect access to dozens of above-ground crypts and subterranean tombs.

Breakdown of damage:

  • 26 mausoleums or burial sites burglarized
  • Some skeletons hundreds of years old
  • Infants and children among the remains
  • Many victims still unidentified
stealing

Investigation Expands

Authorities are now probing Gerlach’s online community, including social-media groups and Facebook pages, to see whether remains were bought, sold, or traded. A similar case in Luzerne County may be connected, according to law-enforcement sources.

Gerlach remains in Delaware County Prison on $1 million bail; court records list no attorney for him yet.

Key Takeaways

  • 108 skeletons recovered, making this one of the largest U.S. corpse-theft cases on record
  • Families anxiously wait to learn if their relatives’ graves were disturbed
  • Online trafficking of human remains is a central line of inquiry
  • Historic burials have been irreversibly damaged, complicating identification efforts

With forensic anthropologists still cataloguing the remains, prosecutors expect additional charges as the investigation unfolds.

Author

  • Derrick M. Collins reports on housing, urban development, and infrastructure for newsoffortworth.com, focusing on how growth reshapes Fort Worth neighborhoods. A former TV journalist, he’s known for investigative stories that give communities insight before development decisions become irreversible.

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