§61-12-8. Certain deaths to be reported to medical examiners;
failure to report deaths; investigations and
reports; authority of medical examiners to
administer oaths, etc., fees.
(a) When any person dies in this state from violence, or by
apparent suicide, or suddenly when in apparent good health, or when
unattended by a physician, or when an inmate of a public
institution, or from some disease which might constitute a threat
to public health, or in any suspicious, unusual or unnatural
manner, the chief medical examiner, or his or her designee or the
county medical examiner, or the coroner of the county in which
death occurs shall be immediately notified by the physician in
attendance, or if no physician is in attendance, by any
law-enforcement officer having knowledge of the death, or by the
funeral director, or by any other person present or having
knowledge. Any physician or law-enforcement officer, funeral
director or embalmer who willfully fails to comply with this
notification requirement is guilty of a misdemeanor and, upon
conviction, shall be fined not less than one hundred dollars nor
more than five hundred dollars. Upon notice of a death under this
section, the chief medical examiner, or his or her designee or the
county medical examiner, shall take charge of the body and any
objects or articles which, in his or her opinion, may be useful in establishing the cause or manner of death, and deliver them to the
law-enforcement agency having jurisdiction in the case. In the
course of an investigation of a death required to be reported by
this section, the chief medical examiner shall, upon written
request to any law-enforcement agency or any state or regional
correctional facility, be provided with all records of the
investigation of decedent's death and all records of decedent's
incarceration. Where a decedent received therapeutic, corrective
or medical treatment prior to death, the chief medical examiner may
request in writing that any person or other entity which rendered
the treatment promptly provide all records within its possession or
control pertaining to the decedent and the treatment rendered:
Provided, That nothing contained in this section may be construed
as precluding the chief medical examiner from directly inspecting
or obtaining investigation records, incarceration records or
medical records related to the case. Where records of a decedent
become part of the chief medical examiner's file, they are not
subject to subpoena or a request for production directed to the
chief medical examiner.
(b) A county medical examiner, or his or her assistant, shall
make inquiries regarding the cause and manner of death, reduce his
or her findings to writing, and promptly make a full report thereof to the chief medical examiner on forms prescribed by the chief
medical examiner, retaining one copy of the report for his or her
own office records and providing one copy to the prosecuting
attorney of the county in which the death occurred.
(c) A county medical examiner or assistant medical examiner
shall receive a fee for each investigation performed under the
provisions of this article, including the making of required
reports, which fee shall be determined by the chief medical
examiner and paid out of funds appropriated therefor.