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TUE · 2026-06-02 · 16:51 GMTBRIEF NSR-2026-0602-81201
News/US university sells dead bodies to navy for Israeli military…
NSR-2026-0602-81201News Report·EN·Human Rights

US university sells dead bodies to navy for Israeli military training

A documentary series, Direct From, has investigated connections between body donations to US universities and Israeli military training programs. Universities like UCSD and USC receive bodies from donors who do not specify how they will be used, and their families cannot obtain this information afterward.

Dena Takruri,Asiya AhmedAl JazeeraFiled 2026-06-02 · 16:51 GMTLean · CenterRead · 2 min
US university sells dead bodies to navy for Israeli military training
Al JazeeraFIG 01
Reading time
2min
Word count
329words
Sources cited
3cited
Entities identified
12entities
Quality score
100%
§ 01

Briefing Summary

AI-generated
NEWSAR · AI

A documentary series, Direct From, has investigated connections between body donations to US universities and Israeli military training programs. Universities like UCSD and USC receive bodies from donors who do not specify how they will be used, and their families cannot obtain this information afterward. Donor documents reviewed by AJ+ did not indicate that cadavers would be used for military training. This has raised ethical concerns, with a USC-affiliated physician questioning if donors would have consented if they knew their bodies would be used for such purposes. Families of donors have expressed distress, stating their loved ones intended to benefit humanity, not empower foreign militaries. The revelations have led some prospective donors to revoke their commitments.

Confidence 0.90Sources 3Claims 5Entities 12
§ 02

Article analysis

Model · rule-based
Framing
Human Rights
Conflict
Tone
Sensational
AI-assessed
CalmNeutralAlarmist
Factuality
0.60 / 1.00
Mixed
LowHigh
Sources cited
3
Well sourced
FewMany
§ 03

Key claims

5 extracted
01

Wendy Smith revoked her body donation to UCSD, stating she does not want to support genocide, starvation, or Israeli policies.

quoteWendy Smith
Confidence
1.00
02

Jennifer Gomez stated her grandmother would not have agreed to her body being used for military training, especially by militaries accused of war crimes.

quoteJennifer Gomez
Confidence
1.00
03

Donors to universities are not allowed to make requests about how their bodies will be used.

factual
Confidence
0.90
04

Donor documents did not indicate that cadavers would be used to train military personnel, either from the US or Israel.

factualAJ+
Confidence
0.80
05

US universities are selling dead bodies to the Navy for Israeli military training.

factual
Confidence
0.80
§ 04

Full report

2 min read · 329 words
‘Would they have agreed?'Donors to both universities are not allowed to make requests about how their bodies will be used, and their families cannot obtain that information after the fact.Adding to the controversy, donor documents reviewed by AJ+ did not indicate that the cadavers would be used to train military personnel, either from the US or Israel.Dr Mohamad Raad, a USC-affiliated physician, questions whether the donors would have knowingly signed up if they knew their bodies would be used for procedures like perfusion.“Regardless of whether we think it's gruesome to do that to a dead body, the part that's even more disturbing, honestly, to me is: Did the patient know?” Raad said.“And by doing these procedures, coordinating with foreign armies, would they have agreed to that?”For Jennifer Gomez, whose grandmother, Jean McNeil Sargent, donated her body to UCSD in 2012, the answer was an emphatic no.“I didn't realise that we were having international militaries come here to train on our families’ bodies,” Gomez told Al Jazeera. “Especially militaries that are accused of war crimes and are actively murdering people.”Gomez's grandmother died before UCSD started supplying cadavers for the Israeli military programme.Still, Gomez believes donors like her grandmother deserve to know all the possible uses of their bodies before they donate."Most people, like my grandma, go into a decision like this thinking they're going to do something better for the world, not thinking like, 'Oh, I'm going to donate my body, and somehow it's going to make some military force more powerful,'" she said.The revelations about the training programme have even caused some prospective donors to change their minds about participating.English professor Wendy Smith told AJ+ that she is no longer comfortable donating her body after learning about the student journalists' report.“I don't want to support genocide and starvation, and I don't want to support Israeli policies even in the smallest way,” Smith told the documentary team in April.Both she and her husband have revoked their body donations to UCSD.
§ 05

Entities

12 identified
§ 06

Keywords & salience

10 terms
body donation
1.00
military training
0.90
israeli military
0.80
donor consent
0.70
university cadavers
0.70
ucsd
0.60
usc
0.60
ethical concerns
0.50
war crimes accusations
0.40
perfusion procedures
0.40
§ 07

Topic connections

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