she would have to complete an internship during which time she would embomb 20 bodies, have to have a brick and motor business with a selection room, preparation room, viewing room, and inventory on hand -- none of which they were interested in. the law also created a circumstances where an oklahoma-based company had to be a licensed funeral director to sell to consumers in oklahoma but companies outside of the state who sold to consumers in oklahoma did not have to have a funeral directors license. so, kim, could have taken her business, which was essentially computer servers, and moved across the state line to kansas and there she could have sold caskets to consumers in oklahoma all day long. but she didn't want to do that. she wanted to stay in oklahoma. she wanted to raise her family in her hometown of ponca city. she thought the law was wrong because it enabled funeral directors to mark up the their merchandise and take advantage of people at a difficult time in their lives. she stayed in oklahoma and fought the law. she wasn't the only one who thought this law was wrong. legisla