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cryogenic lab, steals frozen brains of man hoping to bring the dead back to life

A scolded wife has raided her ex-husband’s cryogenic lab to steal the frozen brains of those hoping to bring the dead back to life.
Valeria Udalova, 59, and her company’s staff have snatched the remains of those who paid thousands of pounds in hopes of their resurrection.
Some of the bodies, from the UK and the US, were stored in Valeria’s lab of ex-husband Danila Medvedev, 41, in the Moscow region of Russia.
They pulled liquid nitrogen from giant Dewars containing frozen corpses, grabbed these and some dissociated human brains, and loaded them into trucks.
Police were called to intercept horrific human remains preserved by “Frankenstein” technology, offering humanity a chance to “resurrect” in the future.
Medvedev, who runs KrioRus, and Udalova, the former boss of a new company in the Tver region called Open Cryonics, both claim to be the rightful owners of human remains.
Police are now reviewing rival claims while demanding assurances from feuding ex-spouses about the “integrity” of the frozen bodies and brains, as well as the bodies of dozens of dogs and cats that owners hope to bring back to life in the future.
“Valeria didn’t do well, she just cheated,” said Medvedev, who started a new family with another woman.
Added KrioRus expert Aleksey Potapov: “While trying to steal our Dewar, the nitrogen was spilled and most of it fell to the ground.”
Udalova claims she was unfairly kicked out of the old company and is the rightful owner of its assets.
“There are a lot of orders from different countries, especially from dog and cat owners,” she said.
Among the brains frozen in a Moscow store is Dr. Yuri Pichugin, who died in 2018 after inventing a chemical cocktail that could preserve humans for future generations at temperatures as low as minus 196 degrees Celsius.
A brain “awakened” in the coming decades or centuries could be implanted in another human body, it is claimed.
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Post time: Jun-07-2022

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