Brandon Clay Dotson's heart was never found.
The 43-year-old man died at Ventress Correctional Facility in November, and an autopsy was performed on his body. The body was returned. Dotson's family, aware of some of the horror stories that have been reported about Alabama's prisons, hired a private pathologist to do a second autopsy, and that pathologist discovered his heart was missing.
So the family filed a lawsuit against Alabama's prison system, the Department of Forensic Sciences and UAB Medical Center.
Without details, however, a U.S. District Judge has dismissed the case after the family and state "filed a joint stipulation of dismissal," reports AL.com's Ivana Hrynkiw.
Dotson's isn't the only body of an inmate that has reportedly turned up surprisingly with organs missing. So, on Thursday, the Alabama House of Representatives passed a bill that would make it a felony for a medical examiner to take organs without consent of next of kin, reports AL.com's Mike Cason.
That's already against the law. But the bill that passed the House adds a Class C felony penalty. That would make the crime punishable by one to 10 years in prison.
The bill, by Chris England, a Tuscaloosa Democrat, passed 89-1 and moves to the Senate.