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Family claims deceased Alabama inmate's missing heart still unaccounted for after 50 days

The Alabama DOC returned Brandon Dotson to his family with his heart missing – their attorney contends this is evidence of a pattern of "improperly and likely illegally" taking organs.

The Alabama Department of Corrections and staff members at Ventress Correctional Facility have not disclosed the whereabouts of a deceased inmate's missing heart for 50 days, according to court filings on behalf of his family, who are trying to retrieve the organ before it "deteriorates" entirely. 

After hearing that Brandon Clay Dotson had died in the Alabama prison on Nov. 21, his sister Audrey Marie Dotson and mother Audrey South said they spent five days trying to claim his body. 

When he was finally returned to his family, they claim, they saw "bruising on the back of [his] neck and excessive swelling across his head." 

Perturbed and unsure of precisely how he died, court documents show, the family hired their own pathologist to conduct an autopsy. The 43-year-old inmate's heart was missing from his chest cavity, the family claims in their lawsuit. 

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His relatives said in their lawsuit that they are still unclear about how he died, and never received a death certificate. 

Dotson had served 19 years of his 99-year sentence in prison for a burglary conviction and a parole violation at Barbour County's Ventress Correctional Facility.

In the days before his death, Dotson allegedly told prison staff that another inmate was threatening him with violence. In response, prison staff allegedly moved Dotson from "segregated housing" into general population, where he could access drugs and be attacked easily by those seeking to harm and exploit him in the "grossly understaffed and severely overcrowded" Ventress Correctional Facility, according to the lawsuit.

Although he was not sentenced to life, the initial complaint shows, the alleged misconduct of prison staff was "tantamount to a death sentence."

According to court filings lodged with the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Alabama last week, defendants named in the lawsuit "glaringly were not able to answer" the whereabouts of Dotson's heart in a phone conference on Dec. 7.

The suit names Alabama Department of Corrections brass, the warden of the Ventress Correctional Facility, the director of the Alabama Department of Forensic Sciences and unnamed prison employees as defendants. 

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The University of Alabama at Birmingham Heersink School of Medicine is also named as a defendant, because the school is a "possible intended recipient of Mr. Dotson's heart."

The lawsuit cites an alleged recent history of the Alabama DOC providing "human organs and tissues" to medical students for "laboratory exercises." 

In an emailed statement in October, University of Alabama at Birmingham media specialist Brianna Hoge told Fox News Digital that the school has reviewed its records, "which show that UAB did not perform this autopsy and has not been involved in this matter," and subsequently reached out to the family's attorney.

Regardless, the school is still named in more recent court filings. Among 16 documents Dotson's family are seeking from the defendants include any contracts between the Alabama Department of Corrections and the Alabama Department of Forensic Sciences – or any entity connected with the University of Alabama at Birmingham, including their department of pathology. 

Dotson's family successfully petitioned for an expedited discovery period, which the court imposed on all parties on Dec. 29, court documents show. 

"Plaintiffs contend that there are few matters that present more of an ‘impelling urgency’ or ‘hazard of loss’ requiring swift action than in the case of a missing organ. Organs and tissues that are not adequately preserved deteriorate," reads a Jan. 3 court filing. 

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Dotson's family members did not comment at press time in fear of jeopardizing the ongoing legal process, and Faraino was unavailable for comment.

An attorney representing the University of Alabama at Birmingham declined to comment on the case. 

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