A Texas mother is fighting for answers she hasn’t been given in more than a decade.
Kim Erick believes one of the preserved cadavers in the popular “Real Bodies” exhibit may actually be her son, Chris — who died suddenly in 2012 at just 23. Police initially told her he had died quietly in his sleep from heart failure. But when she received the scene photos, she noticed bruising, lacerations, and what looked like restraint marks. A later toxicology test revealed lethal levels of cyanide, confirming her suspicion that something far more disturbing had happened.
Despite this, a 2014 grand jury declined to issue charges, and officials continued to classify the death as a suicide by undetermined means — an explanation Kim never accepted. Then, while reviewing medical images years later, she stumbled upon a figure in the Real Bodies exhibit whose skull fracture matched Chris’s, and whose tattoo area appeared to be cleanly removed. The shock of seeing what she believed could be her son’s body displayed publicly left her reeling.
Kim demanded a DNA test, but exhibit organizers refused, stating the body had been legally sourced in China decades before Chris’s death. What troubled her even more was the figure’s sudden, quiet removal from the Las Vegas exhibit shortly after her accusations gained attention. It was relocated briefly, then vanished from public listings entirely, fueling her fears that something was being hidden from her.