Pueblo police are investigating an unusual burglary that has left a Colorado woman grieving, and authorities are puzzled. Thieves reportedly broke into a home in northeast Pueblo and stole only the cremated ashes of the victim’s late father and some other items of little value, leaving most other valuables untouched.
On the afternoon of January 21, surveillance footage captured two individuals exiting a parked black car and quickly walking to a residence on Brothers Lane, according to Pueblo Police. The suspects then broke through a sliding glass door and entered the home, where they spent several moments before fleeing the scene.
When homeowner Geraldine Sierra returned, she discovered that the urn containing the cremated remains of her father, Patrick Sierra, had been stolen. Valuable electronics and jewelry in the home were reportedly left undisturbed, raising questions about the motive for the break-in. Sierra noted that some of her purses and some of her son’s jeans were also gone.
The burglarly seemed targeted
Pueblo Police Department detectives are actively investigating the case. A department spokesperson confirmed that officers responded to Sierra’s home after she alerted them to the break-in. By the time law enforcement arrived, the suspects were gone, and no arrests have been made.
Investigators believe the burglary may have been targeted, not a random act of opportunity. Law enforcement noted that the suspects appeared to know the general layout of the property and went straight to the bedroom where the urn was located without rummaging through other rooms.
While police have not publicly confirmed that the thieves intentionally targeted the urn because of its contents, the fact that few other items were taken it seems like that the motive is linked to the sentimental value of the remains. There is no official confirmation, however, that the burglary was aimed specifically at stealing cremated ashes for personal or other reasons.
“My father passed away last year after a battle with cancer,” Sierra told local news outlet KRDO. “He was like my best friend — someone I talked to every single day until he passed. Everything just stopped when he died.”
Sierra has since made a heartfelt appeal through the media and to law enforcement: “Return my father’s ashes.”
Colorado’s weird history with human remains
This bizarre Pueblo burglary isn’t the only unsettling instance in Colorado involving human remains and cremated ashes in recent years. In February 2024, police in suburban Denver discovered the body of a woman in a hearse and the cremated remains of at least 30 other people in a home rented by a former funeral-home owner, who allegedly left the body in the vehicle for about two years and may have given families incorrect ashes of their loved ones.
Colorado has also grappled with a larger funeral-industry scandal: inspectors found roughly 20 decomposing bodies hidden behind a concealed door inside a Pueblo funeral home, and authorities revealed that some families may have been sent fake cremains.
Moreover, the case involving nearly 190 deteriorating bodies stored at a Penrose funeral home sparked legislative calls for reform after families said they were given urns that did not contain their relatives’ remains.
Published: Jan 31, 2026 08:36 am