Bill Text: MI HB4124 | 2019-2020 | 100th Legislature | Introduced
Bill Title: Counties; employees and officers; limitation on individuals serving as medical examiner investigators; revise for counties with populations of 50,000 or less. Amends sec. 5 of 1953 PA 181 (MCL 52.205).
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Republican 1-0)
Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2019-02-06 - Bill Electronically Reproduced 02/05/2019 [HB4124 Detail]
Download: Michigan-2019-HB4124-Introduced.html
HOUSE BILL No. 4124
February 5, 2019, Introduced by Rep. Cole and referred to the Committee on Local Government and Municipal Finance.
A bill to amend 1953 PA 181, entitled
"An act relative to investigations in certain instances of the
causes of death within this state due to violence, negligence or
other act or omission of a criminal nature or to protect public
health; to provide for the taking of statements from injured
persons under certain circumstances; to abolish the office of
coroner and to create the office of county medical examiner in
certain counties; to prescribe the powers and duties of county
medical examiners; to prescribe penalties for violations of the
provisions of this act; and to prescribe a referendum thereon,"
by amending section 5 (MCL 52.205), as amended by 2010 PA 108.
THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN ENACT:
Sec. 5. (1) If a county medical examiner has notice that the
body of an individual who may have died in a manner described in
section 3 has been found within the county medical examiner's
county, the county medical examiner shall take charge of the body.
If after examining the body and investigating the cause and manner
of the death the county medical examiner considers a further
examination necessary, he or she may cause the body to be removed
to the public morgue. If the investigation is solely for the reason
that the decedent had no medical attendance during the 48 hours
immediately preceding the hour of death, and if the decedent had
chosen not to have medical attendance because of his or her bona
fide held religious convictions, removal is not required unless
there is evidence of other conditions described in section 3. If
there is no public morgue, the body may be removed to a private
morgue designated by the county medical examiner.
(2) The county medical examiner may designate a medical
examiner investigator appointed under section 1a(2) to take charge
of the body, make pertinent inquiry, note the circumstances
surrounding the death, and, if considered necessary, cause the body
to be transported to the morgue for examination by the county
medical examiner. The county medical examiner shall maintain a list
of medical examiner investigators appointed under section 1a(2) and
their qualifications and shall file the list with the local law
enforcement agencies. A medical examiner investigator appointed
under
section 1a(2) shall must not do
any of the following: be
(a) Except in a county with a population of 50,000 or less as
determined by the most recent federal decennial census, be an agent
or employee of a person or funeral establishment licensed under
article 18 of the occupational code, 1980 PA 299, MCL 339.1801 to
339.1812. ,
receive,
(b) Except in a county with a population of 50,000 or less as
determined by the most recent federal decennial census, receive
directly or indirectly, remuneration in connection with the
disposition
of the body. , or make
(c) Make funeral or burial arrangements without approval of
the next of kin, if known, or the individual responsible for the
funeral expenses.
(3) The county medical examiner may perform or direct to be
performed an autopsy and shall carefully reduce or cause to be
reduced to writing each fact and circumstance tending to show the
condition of the body and the cause and manner of death, and shall
include in that writing the name and address of each individual
present at the autopsy. The individual performing the autopsy shall
subscribe the writing described in this subsection.
(4) Except as otherwise provided in this subsection, the
county medical examiner shall ascertain the identity of the
decedent and immediately and as compassionately as possible notify
the next of kin of the decedent's death and the location of the
body. The notification described in this subsection is not required
if a person from the state police, a county sheriff department, a
township police department, or a municipal police department states
to the county medical examiner that the notification has already
occurred.
(5) If visual identification of a decedent is impossible as a
result of burns, decomposition, or other disfiguring injuries or if
the county medical examiner is aware that the death is the result
of an accident that involved 2 or more individuals who were
approximately the same age, sex, height, weight, hair color, eye
color, and race, then the county medical examiner shall verify the
identity of the decedent through fingerprints, dental records, DNA,
or other definitive identification procedures and, if the accident
resulted in the survival of any individuals with the same
attributes, shall notify the respective hospital or institution of
his or her findings. The county medical examiner may conduct an
autopsy under subsection (3) if he or she determines that an
autopsy reasonably appears to be required pursuant to law. After
the county medical examiner, a deputy, a person from the state
police, a county sheriff department, a township police department,
or a municipal police department has made diligent effort to locate
and notify the next of kin, the county medical examiner may order
and conduct the autopsy with or without the consent of the next of
kin of the decedent. The county medical examiner or a deputy shall
keep a written record of the efforts to locate and notify the next
of kin for a period of 1 year from the date of the autopsy.
(6) Except as otherwise provided in this subsection, the
county medical examiner shall promptly deliver or return the body
or any portion of the body to relatives or representatives of the
decedent after an examination or autopsy is performed under this
section. If there are no relatives or representatives of the
decedent known to the county medical examiner, he or she may cause
the body to be buried pursuant to law. A county medical examiner
may retain any portion of the body that he or she considers
necessary to establish the cause of death, the conditions
contributing to death, or the manner of death, or as evidence of
any crime. Except as otherwise provided in this subsection, if a
portion of the body retained is an entire organ or limb of the
decedent, the county medical examiner shall attempt to verbally or
in writing notify the relatives or representatives of the decedent
of that retention and offer an opportunity for the relative or
representative to request the return of that organ or limb. If
notification is verbally made under this subsection, the county
medical examiner shall follow up with written notification. The
county medical examiner or a deputy shall keep a written record of
the efforts to notify the relatives or representatives of the
decedent under this subsection for a period of 1 year from the date
of the notification or attempt to notify. This subsection does not
apply to anatomical gifts made under part 101 of the public health
code, 1978 PA 368, MCL 333.10101 to 333.10123. Upon determination
that retention of the portions of the body is no longer necessary
under this subsection, the county medical examiner shall do all of
the following, as applicable:
(a) If requested in writing under this subsection, promptly
deliver or return the retained organ or limb to the relatives or
representatives of the decedent.
(b) Dispose of any remaining retained body portions in the
manner prescribed for medical waste under part 138 of the public
health
code, 1978 PA 368, MCL 333.13801 to 333.13831.333.13832.
(7) A county medical examiner or any person acting under the
authority of the county medical examiner who performs the medical
examiner duties for the retention of body parts, as added by the
amendatory
act that added this subsection, shall is not be liable
in a civil action as a result of an act or omission by the person
arising out of and in the course of the person's good faith
performance of those medical examiner duties unless that person's
act or omission was the result of that person's negligence.
Enacting section 1. This amendatory act takes effect 90 days
after the date it is enacted into law.