NEW post mortem examination procedures have been introduced at one of Ireland's busiest hospitals, Beaumont in Dublin, after a double set of vital organs were found in the body of an English tourist when it was returned to London following his sudden death in Ireland.Louis Selo, 55, had two hearts, four kidneys and two livers in his abdominal cavity when his body was opened up in London on its return in August 2006 from Dublin.The second set of organs belonged to an unnamed Irish woman whose body had lain close to his during separate autopsies in Dublin.The bungle came to light this week in a report obtained by The Irish Times under the Freedom of Information Act.The report of an independent investigation into how all the organs ended up in the one body found that a technician in Beaumont Hospital put them there.Post mortem examinations had been carried out on the two bodies at or about the same time in the same autopsy room.The senior anatomy pathology technician responsible for reconstructing the body of the woman had stitched it up and returned it to the fridge when he noticed a tray of organs on her side of a dissection bench.He didn't believe he could have missed them during the reconstruction so assumed they were from the male body.The report said, "He placed them in the bag for the male body without making any further checks or asking anybody else if they knew the origin of the organs." Asked what he was thinking when he did this, the technician told the inquiry he was simply tidying up.The mistake would never have come to light had Selo's body not undergone a second post mortem back in London, in accordance with standard U.K. practice.The London hospital, St. Tomas's, contacted Beaumont and the extra organs were returned to the family of the dead Irish woman. Nobody had noticed she was buried without her organs.Under the new procedures at Beaumont different colored bags are now used for each body when there is more than one in the autopsy room, and the bags are labeled with the patient's name.Asked whether action had been taken against any member of staff, Beaumont said, "Appropriate disciplinary procedures have been completed."Health Minister Mary Harney said the blunder was "unacceptable," but she was satisfied the incident was properly investigated and new procedures put in place.