Except I did do the slightest bit of research, at least to the extent that I went through Everhere's listing process myself. Anyone can seemingly create a listing there without legal verification. The only time I saw you needed to verify the death was if you were collecting donations.
The creation of Bruno's obituary on Everhere was automated and taken from data provided by the Boersma funeral home, who did file and receive a copy of his death certificate. This should be evident based on the first line of the obituary:
Here is Bruno Kucinskas Jr.’s obituary. Please accept Everhere’s sincere condolences.
It just happened to appear in the search results ahead of the Boersma one, which is why I grabbed it first. A few posts later ibminer posted the Boersma one, which should have been good enough for any unbiased person to conclude for certain that he was deceased.
I tried to create an obituary there to test out what you said and upon completion it was met with this message:
The obituary will now be reviewed and verified by a member of our team. Once approved, it will be online and visible to all visitors. Please note that we reserve the right to delete all obituaries with fictitious or inappropriate content.
So practically you should apply as much rigor to your theory about not knowing the truth about something that you did with Bruno's death as you would to understanding how the obituary creation process works.
For whatever reason you are continuing to overlook common sense in order to pursue a long-standing grudge against a now deceased individual. As a moderator you should be able to be a bit more objective in your approach to these issues, even if you are writing about it from your shitposting account.
I don't know for sure if his family collected the funds from his account, they never got back to me about that, and it's not my place to pry any further.