IBRF, with the help of Dr. Fellus' medical credentials in NJ, got the body on a plane with a company that specializes in air transport of patients cross-country.
Oh, the rules & regulations regarding embalming are MANY, as varied as the jurisdictions within & without the States! One "biggie" is that the FTC (Federal Trade Commission) REQUIRES that funeral homes' staff & directors provide the information that embalming is NOT universally required except in special cases.
SO, how did Jahi get to NJ?....she was NOT transported via a commercial carrier (California is one of a few States requiring it before transport on a commercial carrier)
HOWEVER................embalming IS required prior to "leaving N.J." (LOL, for some reason that sounds funny as written!) and crossing over State lines! (Alabama & Alaska also have this requirement)
NOW.................given that Jahi has become a high visibility figure, just driving her back to Cali in a personal vehicle would be very, very difficult on SO many levels.
Just for those interested, here's the California guidelines:California Health and Safety Code 7355:
"(a) Except as provided in subdivision (b), the bodies of persons who have died from any cause shall not be received for transportation by a common carrier unless the body has been embalmed and prepared by a licensed embalmer and placed in a sound casket and enclosed in a transportation case.
(b) A dead body, which cannot be embalmed or is in a state of decomposition, shall be received for transportation by a common carrier if the body is placed in an airtight metal casket enclosed in a strong transportation case or in a sound casket enclosed in an airtight metal or metal-lined transportation case."
THUS.....the need to revoke the California death certificate as the New Jersey declaration of brain dead is a religiously related denial protection and a "non-deceased" Jahi could be transported WITHOUT embalming to Ca for "treatment" _____>>>>>>>>Just my opinion based on interpretation
PS: the loss of licensure did cause a serious situation @ St. Pete's.......there was no longer an attending physician to run the case.