Family suing San Diego cemetery after remains of Juneteenth trailblazer missing from burial plot

This picture provided by the Cooper family shows Sidney and Thelma Cooper, married on May 19, 1953, in San Diego. Sidney Cooper's remains were not buried in the plot as expected and remain missing. Relatives of the late Black businessman who helped popularize Juneteenth in San Diego is suing a cemetery after his remains were reported missing from the family's burial plot. Greenwood Memorial Park and Mortuary informed the family that Sidney Cooper's body and casket were not in the plot where he was supposed to have been buried more than two decades ago. Cemetery staff discovered it was empty as they prepared to bury Cooper's wife, Thelma, who died in March 2023. (Courtesy of the Cooper Family via AP)

SAN DIEGO (AP) — Relatives of a late Black businessman who helped popularize Juneteenth in San Diego are suing a cemetery after his remains were reported missing from the family's burial plot.

Greenwood Memorial Park and Mortuary informed the family that Sidney Cooper's body and casket were not in the plot where he was supposed to have been buried more than two decades ago. Cemetery staff discovered it was empty as they prepared to bury Cooper's wife, Thelma, who died in March.

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