Loftesness then told a Longview police investigator that she witnessed Dorothy inappropriately touching Judge's body around July 5 or 6, one or two days after Judge died, according to investigative reports.

Loftesness, who was interviewed by police on Feb. 23, said she and Dorothy removed Judge's body from a cooler and prepared to send it to Vancouver where it would be cremated. Dorothy commented that the deceased woman's breasts were "perky" and said he doubted they were "real," Loftesness told police. Then, Dorothy grabbed Judge's bare breasts, "jiggled" them and declared that they were "nice," according to the account Loftesness gave police.

Loftesness, who is still employed by the funeral home, told police the incident "made her very uncomfortable" and said she "didn't think it was very respectful."

Loftesness also told police she was "worried about losing her job" and "wished she had never said anything." Nisbet, she said, had once been married to her mother, long before Loftesness was born.

Also on Feb. 23, police spoke with Mike Nisbet, the funeral home's owner, who said that Loftesness had given him a "vague" account of the allegations. One police investigator wrote that Nisbet "appeared to be very irritated that I was there and investigating his employee."