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A media report says that the body of three-year-old Indian born Sherin Mathews, who disappeared from her Indian-American foster parents home in Richardson, has been sent to a funeral home, but a medical report on how the Indian girl died is yet to come out.
The cause of Sherin's death is still pending, a spokesman for the police department in Richardson city, Texas, told Fox News.
A spokesman for the Dallas County Medical Examiner said the body of Sherin was released on Saturday, but did not say who has custody of the body.
It is not clear if Sherin's foster mother Sini Mathews will have a role in handling the funeral arrangements since Sherin's foster father, Wesley Mathews, is under the custody of the Dallas County Sheriff's Department in connection with the child's tragic death.
The missing child has become an international point of discussion and has raised several questions on the process of adoption.
Sherin was adopted in 2016 by the Indian-American couple, Wesley Mathews and Sini Mathews.
Wesley Mathews was re-arrested after he changed his story about Sherin's disappearance from their home. He had earlier claimed that she went missing after he sent her outside their home at around 3 am as punishment for not drinking her milk.
Police are still investigating how Sherin died and how long her body had been in the drainage ditch located nearly one km from her home.
Thousands of people took to Facebook to post unfounded theories about Sherin's death or videos of themselves crying over "Princess Sherin." They've dubbed her "daughter of the world" and "our child." They follow developments posted on Sherin-focused Facebook pages and Twitter hashtags.
An online petition, created by 23-year-old Richardson resident Omair Siddiqi, who said he has no connection to the Mathews family, asks for authorities to release her body and allow a group to give her an interfaith burial. The petition received more than 5,000 signatures as of Saturday.
Consulate General of India Houston, Anupam Ray, who has been monitoring this case from day one, had told PTI that "consulate has not received any such request. We have not been approached by anyone. All mortal remains being taken to India require a no objection from the Consulate".
"Her body will not be sent back to the country she was adopted from, unless her parents decide they want that to happen, regardless of their legal standing," Steven Kurtz, chief death investigator at the Dallas County medical examiner's office, where Sherin's body was autopsied, had said.
"It's not something that the consulate does. It's all at the request of next of kin," Kurtz said.
According to the petition, "the body of Sherin Mathews not be released to Sherin's adoptive parents (Mr & Mrs Wesley Mathew)," due to the circumstances surrounding her death. But that's not the way the law works, he said.
In a case like this, Sherin's mother would be the one who would make the arrangement for her burial because her father is in jail and unable to do so, Kurtz said.
Even in a case in which both parents are jailed, they would still get to appoint someone to handle the arrangements.
Sini Mathews has not been charged with a crime.
Siddiqui said the petition is about asking Sherin's family to let the community participate in her funeral.
Also Read: Sherin’s Father Confesses to Dumping Body After She Choked on Milk
"If they want to do a private burial and memorial, we will honour that. But we will do our own without her body. I don't want to come in and steal her body; I just want people to know that we're here if the family needs us," he said.
Earlier, another petition has been started by community leader Father Thomas Ambalaveli to not hand over the body of Sherin to her parents, and rather to the community, so that a proper memorial and burial service could be done.
Also Read: Distraught Neighbours Doubt Parents’ Role in Sherin Mathew’s Death
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