http://www.news.com.au/story/0,23599,21179991-1702,00.html
news.com.au said:THE University of NSW has apologised to the families of people whose remains were donated for anatomy classes following a scandal over the abuse of body parts.
The university's school of anatomy had its licence to conduct anatomy classes revoked after an audit revealed remains were sexually interfered with, and piled together in coffins.
Police are investigating claims about the mistreatment of cadavers, including fondling of breasts and vaginas, and using a head for degrading purposes, Fairfax newspapers reported today.
The audit also revealed serious problems with labelling and storage of cadavers.
The university's Deputy Vice-Chancellor Professor Richard Henry said while no formal contact had yet been made to the families of body donors, he did have a message for them.
"We'd like to apologise for any distress those families are suffering at the moment,'' Prof Henry told ABC Radio.
"The difficulty is we are still trying to fully understand what happened.
"We are caught in the balance of not wanting to unnecessarily concern the families and at the same time we don't want to fail to apologise.''
The university was still in the process of identifying which bodies had been involved but once that was done, it would personally contact relatives, he said.
Prof Henry denied that the university had known about the allegations for three years.
The claims concerning a laboratory staff member and a supervisor had only come to light in October last year when two other staff members made the allegations under protected disclosure, he said.
The accused staff member no longer works at the university while the supervisor has accused university authorities of ignoring attempts to blow the whistle on the abuse for three years.
Prof Henry said the university had no interest in making the supervisor, who stands accused of overseeing the mislabelling of body parts, or anyone else a scapegoat.
Prof Henry said while the university had left the claims of sexual abuse to the police, it was closely investigating the issue of mislabelling and storage.
The university planned to upgrade the laboratory, which is used to train surgeons rather than medical students, who use an unrelated facility at the campus, and microchip body parts, he said.