Some people would not just let the dead stay dead.
A recent report in Time Techland says that a company will be offering relatives of the deceased a microchip solution to avert the theft of the deceased’s tombstone. This microchip can be inserted into the memorial that will sound an alarm and send a text message to the relatives’ cell phones if it is disturbed.
Jo’burg already allows microchips to be placed inside graves to help families locate their deceased’s resting places in the cemeteries. However with the increasing spate of thefts of marble or granite tombstones, authorities are taking technology a step further to foil these thefts which end up in the hands of crooked stonemasons for recycling.
Jo’burg witnesses about 20 marble tombstones every month from its 36 public cemeteries, despite security guards and perimeter sensors. Alan Buff, the manager of Johannesburg City Parks Cemeteries and Crematoriums, says “The new tombstone microchips developed by a private company will be offered at the beginning of next year as part of the city’s “smart” initiatives.” He also said that the city has allowed two pilot projects at its Avalon and Westpark cemeteries, and will roll out the technology further if it stems the thefts of the valuable items.
The microchip system is called Memorial Alert, said Mark Pringle, the director of the private company that established the technology.
“We place a transmitter unit into the tombstone, so that it is not visible or accessible. Any unauthorized tampering activates a number of alarms,” he said. First, a loud alarm goes off at the cemetery.
“This in itself should be a fair warning to the perpetrators,” he said. Then text messages are sent to the mobile phones of delegated family members and any integrated security companies.
The technology has a provision to put a tracking device in it, but Pringle said the company is not including that in the first wave of installations because it decreases the battery life and would make it too expensive for many families. Considering that moving the heavy headstone will trigger alarms, Pringle said that should be enough to dissuade thieves from trying to lug it away and he is confident that tracking devices won’t be needed.
Memorial Alert has a patent granted in South Africa, where it will officially launch in January, and also a British patent, Pringle said, adding that he hopes the technology will expand beyond South Africa since tombstone thefts are a worldwide issue.
A price for the chips and related fees have not yet been set.