| Chapter 046 |
| 2026 -- H 7933 SUBSTITUTE A Enacted 06/10/2026 |
| A N A C T |
| RELATING TO HEALTH AND SAFETY -- OFFICE OF STATE MEDICAL EXAMINERS |
Introduced By: Representatives Potter, Donovan, and Giraldo |
| Date Introduced: February 27, 2026 |
| It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows: |
| SECTION 1. Sections 23-4-1, 23-4-2, 23-4-3, 23-4-4, 23-4-5, 23-4-6, 23-4-7, 23-4-8, 23- |
| 4-9, 23-4-10, 23-4-11, 23-4-13, 23-4-14 and 23-4-15 of the General Laws in Chapter 23-4 entitled |
| "Office of State Medical Examiners" are hereby amended to read as follows: |
| 23-4-1. Definitions. |
| (a) “Assistant medical examiner” means a duly licensed doctor of medicine or doctor of |
| osteopathy appointed to assist the office of state medical examiners on a part-time basis in a medical |
| examiner role subordinate to the chief medical examiner. |
| (b) “Autopsy” means the external inspection of a dead body and subsequent dissection of |
| a dead body and the removal and examination of bone, tissue, organs, and foreign objects, internal |
| examination and collection of specimens and relevant foreign objects, for laboratory and/or other |
| forensic testing as deemed necessary for the purpose of determining the condition of the body and |
| the cause and the manner of the death. |
| (c) “Cause of death” means the agent that has directly or indirectly resulted in a death the |
| disease, condition, or injury that initiated the chain of events that led directly to the death. |
| (d)(e) “External inspection” means an external examination of a dead body without |
| dissection. Specimens such as blood may be collected during an external inspection to assist with |
| determining the cause and manner of death. |
| (e)(d) “Death investigation” means the investigation into a death that falls to the |
| jurisdiction of the office of state medical examiners to the extent necessary to establish the cause |
| and manner of death with a reasonable degree of medical certainty. Death investigations may |
| include, but are not limited to, death scene investigation, review of medical records, external |
| inspection, autopsy, and postmortem testing. |
| (d)(f) “Inquest” means an official judicial inquiry before a medical examiner and/or |
| medical examiners jury for the purpose of determining the manner of death. |
| (g) Interested person” for the purposes of this title shall meansmean spouse or registered |
| domestic partner, sibling(s) if over eighteen (18) years of age, parent(s) or guardian(s), |
| grandparent(s), or his or her children, grandchildren, or great grandchildren over (18) years of age, |
| or the guardian of the deceased person at the time of the deceased person’s death. |
| (e)(h) “Manner of death” means the means or fatal agency that caused a death how the |
| death occurred. Manner of death includes, but is not limited to, homicide, suicide, natural, accident, |
| or undetermined. |
| (i) “Physician” means any person licensed to practice allopathic or osteopathic medicine |
| pursuant to the provisions of chapter 37 of title 5. |
| (f)(j) “Postmortem examination” means examination of the decedent’s body or remains |
| after death and includes an examination of the dead body and surroundings by an agent of the office |
| of state medical examiners but does not include dissection of the body for any purpose either an |
| external inspection, partial autopsy, or a full autopsy. |
| (g)(k) “Work product” means preliminary drafts, notes, impressions, memoranda, working |
| papers, and similar documents of a governmental entity, whether in electronic or other another |
| format. |
| 23-4-2. Establishment of office. |
| (a) There is established in the department of health the office of state medical examiners. |
| The director of health, with the advice of the state medical examiners commission, is authorized to |
| adopt, amend, promulgate, and enforce rules, and regulations, and standards that may be designed |
| to further the accomplishment of the purposes of this chapter. |
| (b) The office of state medical examiners shall obtain and maintain accreditation by the |
| National Association of Medical Examiners (NAME) or other national accrediting organization in |
| the field of forensic medicine and pathology medical examiner death investigation systems. |
| 23-4-3. Functions. |
| The office of state medical examiners shall be responsible for: |
| (1) The investigation of deaths occurring within the state that, in its judgment, might |
| reasonably be expected to involve causes or manners of death enumerated in this chapter; |
| (2) For the conduct of inquests when requested by the attorney general; |
| (3) For the performance of autopsies postmortem examinations, including the retention, |
| examination, and appropriate disposal of tissue, when appropriate, for deaths that, in its judgment, |
| might reasonably be expected to involve causes or manners of deaths enumerated in this chapter; |
| (4) For the written determination of the causes and manners of death investigated pursuant |
| to this chapter; |
| (5) For the presentation to the courts of Rhode Island of expert testimony relating to the |
| cause and manner of death enumerated in this chapter; |
| (6) For the keeping of complete records, including names decedent name, places location |
| of death, circumstances of death, and causes and manners of all deaths, of deaths investigated and |
| reported, copies of which shall be delivered to the attorney general and of which written |
| determinations of causes of death shall be made available for public inspection; |
| (7) For the burial of bodies for which there is no other existing legal responsibility to do so |
| For approving organ and tissue donation to the extent possible from decedents whose deaths are |
| being investigated by the office of state medical examiners; provided that, such donation will not |
| interfere with the ability to determine cause or manner of death with a reasonable degree of medical |
| certainty; |
| (8) For the development and enforcement of procedures for the pronouncement of death |
| and for the transplantation of organs from bodies of persons who have died within the state For |
| making available the death investigation case information necessary to compile the case studies |
| that will be reviewed by the respective multidisciplinary death review teams enumerated in this |
| chapter; |
| (9)(i) For supporting a multidisciplinary team review of child fatalities administered by the |
| department of health with the goal to decrease the prevalence of preventable child deaths and report |
| recommendations for community- and systems-intervention strategies. A child death-review team |
| shall include, but is not limited to, representation from state agencies, health care, child welfare, |
| and law enforcement; and |
| (ii) The work product of the child death-review team shall be confidential and protected |
| under all applicable laws, including the federal Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act |
| of 1996 and the Rhode Island confidentiality of health care information act (chapter 37.3 of title 5) |
| and shall be exempt from the provisions of chapter 2 of title 38 and shall be deemed privileged |
| pursuant to § 23-17.21-8; |
| (10) The department of health shall work with the department of children, youth and |
| families and the office of the child advocate to develop a process to ensure the timely availability |
| of autopsy reports on child deaths; |
| (11)(i) For supporting a multidisciplinary team review of drug-related overdose deaths |
| administered by the department of health with the goal of reducing the prevalence of these deaths |
| by examining emerging trends in overdose, identifying potential demographic, geographic, and |
| structural points for prevention, and other factors. The multidisciplinary team for review of drug- |
| related overdose deaths may include, as determined by the director of the department of health, |
| representatives from the department of health; the department of the attorney general; the Rhode |
| Island state police; the department of corrections; the department of behavioral healthcare, |
| developmental disabilities and hospitals; the Rhode Island Police Chiefs Association; the Hospital |
| Association of Rhode Island; an emergency department physician; a primary care physician; an |
| addiction medicine/treatment provider; a mental health clinician; a toxicologist; a recovery coach |
| or other representative of the recovery community; and others as may be determined by the director |
| of the department of health; |
| (ii) The work product of the multidisciplinary team for review of drug-related overdose |
| deaths shall be confidential and protected under all applicable laws, including the federal Health |
| Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 and the Rhode Island confidentiality of health |
| care information act (chapter 37.3 of title 5), and shall be exempt from the provisions of chapter 2 |
| of title 38, not subject to subpoena, discovery, or introduction into evidence in any civil or criminal |
| proceeding, and not subject to disclosure beyond the team members (except to authorized |
| employees of the department of health as necessary to perform its official duties pursuant to this |
| subsection (11)); |
| (iii) The multidisciplinary team shall report on or before December 1 of each year to the |
| governor, the speaker of the house, and president of the senate, which report shall summarize the |
| activities of the team, as well as the team’s findings, progress towards reaching its goals, and |
| recommendations for any needed changes in legislation or otherwise; |
| (iv) [Deleted by P.L. 2021, ch. 21, § 1 and P.L. 2021, ch. 22, § 1.] |
| (v) The multidisciplinary team, or Rhode Island department of health state employees |
| appointed by the director of the department of health, shall, as relatives of the deceased are willing, |
| be empowered to gather information from such consenting relatives regarding the circumstances of |
| the decedent’s death. The information gathered shall remain confidential and publicly released as |
| aggregate de-identified information. The information gathered will be utilized to help identify |
| specific prevention and intervention strategies to prevent further deaths. The information gathered |
| shall not be subject to subpoena, discovery, or introduction into evidence in any civil or criminal |
| proceeding, and shall not be subject to disclosure beyond the team members except to authorized |
| employees of the department of health as necessary to perform its official duties pursuant to this |
| subsection (11), and except as aggregate de-identified information; |
| (12)(i) For supporting a multidisciplinary maternal mortality review committee |
| administered by the department of health for review of maternal deaths of women that occur during |
| pregnancy, delivery, or within one year of the end of pregnancy with the goal of reducing the |
| prevalence of such deaths by examining emerging trends in such deaths, identifying potential |
| demographic, geographic, and structural points for prevention, and other factors. This committee |
| has the authority to request and receive data from vital records, healthcare providers, healthcare |
| facilities, pharmacy records, and any other agencies or officials having information that is necessary |
| for the committee to carry out its duties under this section. The multidisciplinary maternal mortality |
| review committee shall include, but not be limited to, as determined by the director of the |
| department of health, representation from state agencies; an obstetric provider from each hospital |
| that delivers obstetrical care; a neonatal specialist; individuals or organizations that represent the |
| populations that are most affected by pregnancy-related deaths or pregnancy-associated deaths and |
| lack of access to maternal healthcare services; a perinatal pathologist; and a maternal fetal medicine |
| specialist. This committee shall develop recommendations for the prevention of maternal deaths |
| and disseminate findings and recommendations to policy makers, healthcare providers, healthcare |
| facilities, and the general public; |
| (ii) The work product of the maternal mortality review committee shall be confidential and |
| protected under all applicable laws, including the federal Health Insurance Portability and |
| Accountability Act of 1996 and the Rhode Island confidentiality of health care information act |
| (chapter 37.3 of title 5) and shall be exempt from the provisions of chapter 2 of title 38 and shall |
| be deemed privileged pursuant to § 23-17.21-8; and |
| (13)(i) For supporting a multidisciplinary team review of suicide deaths administered by |
| the department of health with the goal of reducing the prevalence of these deaths by examining |
| trends in demographic, geographic, community, and structural protective and risk factors. The |
| multidisciplinary team may include, as determined by the director of the Rhode Island department |
| of health (RIDOH), representatives from the office of the state medical examiners, RIDOH’s |
| violence and injury prevention program, the department of behavioral healthcare, developmental |
| disabilities and hospitals, emergency medical services, law enforcement, health care, and others as |
| may be determined by the director of the department of health; |
| (ii) The work product of the adult suicide fatality review team shall be confidential and |
| protected under all applicable laws, including the federal Health Insurance Portability and |
| Accountability Act of 1996 and chapter 37.3 of title 5 (the “Rhode Island confidentiality of health |
| care communications and information act”) and shall be exempt from the provisions of chapter 2 |
| of title 38 (“access to public records”) and shall be deemed privileged pursuant to § 23-17.21-8, |
| not subject to subpoena, discovery, or introduction into evidence in any civil or criminal |
| proceeding, and not subject to disclosure beyond the team members (except to authorized |
| employees of the department of health as necessary to perform its official duties pursuant to this |
| subsection (13)); |
| (iii) The multidisciplinary team shall be responsible for developing annual |
| recommendations for the state suicide prevention coalition and/or the state agency(ies) responsible |
| for suicide prevention in Rhode Island. The recommendations should align with the Rhode Island |
| suicide prevention state plan and shall outline, based on suicide fatality case review data, potential |
| strategies to increase protective factors and decrease risk factors to reduce suicide deaths in Rhode |
| Island. |
| 23-4-4. Jurisdiction. |
| The office of state medical examiners shall have the authority to make postmortem |
| examinations conduct death investigations, to undertake inquests, and to perform autopsies |
| postmortem examinations in all deaths occurring in Rhode Island where there may be in its |
| judgment a reasonable belief that the manner of death could be pronounced as: |
| (1) Death by a homicide, suicide, or casualty accident, undetermined or unusual manner; |
| (2) Death due to a criminal abortion; |
| (3) Death due to an accident involving lack of due care on the part of a person other than |
| the deceased; |
| (4)(2) Death which is the immediate or remote consequences of any physical or toxic injury |
| incurred while the deceased person was employed; |
| (5)(3) Death due to the use of addictive illegal drugs, prescription drugs, non-prescription |
| drugs, medicinal substances, or other identifiable or unidentifiable chemical agents, including |
| toxins and toxicants; or |
| (6)(4) Death due to an infectious agent capable of spreading an epidemic within the state; |
| or |
| (5) Death that is sudden or unexpected when the decedent was in apparent good health; |
| (6) Death that occurred under circumstances reportable to the office of state medical |
| examiners as enumerated in this chapter or as described in rules promulgated by the department. |
| 23-4-5. Chief medical examiner — Assistants and other staff. |
| (a) The office shall be under the immediate supervision of a chief, who shall be known as |
| the “chief medical examiner” and who shall be a physician licensed under the provisions of chapter |
| 37 of title 5, and a qualified forensic pathologist certified by the American Board of Pathology in |
| both anatomic and forensic pathology and who has had forensic training or pathology experience. |
| He or she shall be appointed by the director of health as shall the deputy chief medical examiner |
| with the advice of the medical examiner’s commission. The chief medical examiner shall be in the |
| unclassified service and the deputy chief medical examiner shall be in the classified service. |
| (b) The chief medical examiner shall appoint, with the approval of the director of health, |
| assistant deputy medical examiners and shall hire other staff as necessary to carry out the provisions |
| of this chapter. |
| (c) Persons employed full time at the time of enactment of this chapter within the division |
| of medical examiners in the department of the attorney general shall be transferred to the office of |
| state medical examiners with their former rights and privileges of employment. For members |
| eligible to retire on or before June 30, 2012, such members shall be eligible for retirement benefits |
| after the age of fifty (50) years and service of twenty (20) years, including service within the |
| division of medical examiners. For members eligible to retire on or after July 1, 2012, such |
| members shall be eligible for retirement benefits in accordance with chapters 8 through 10 of title |
| 36. |
| 23-4-6. State medical examiners commission. State postmortem advisory commission. |
| (a) There is established the state medical examiners postmortem advisory commission. The |
| commission shall hear and determine appeals to decisions by the chief medical examiners examiner |
| regarding the undertaking of investigations, inquests, and autopsies, and shall advise the chief |
| medical examiner on matters of public concern cause and manner of death. |
| (b) The commission shall consist of twelve (12) a panel of seven (7) members, three (3) of |
| whom shall be ex officio members, viz., the director of health, the attorney general, the |
| superintendent of state police, and nine (9) citizens of the state to be to include the Rhode Island |
| attorney general or designee from the office of attorney general, with the remainder of members |
| appointed by the governor with the advice and consent of the senate for the a term of three (3) |
| years. Criteria for appointment must include that the remaining members are physicians, preferably |
| with experience in performing autopsies to determine cause of death and who must not have been |
| or currently employed or retained as an independent contractor by the office of state medical |
| examiners within one year after employment or retainment as an independent contractor has ceased. |
| The governor shall give due consideration to any recommendations for nominations submitted to |
| him or herthe governor by the president of the Rhode Island Medical Society, the president of the |
| Rhode Island Society of Pathologists, the president of the Rhode Island Bar Association, board- |
| certified pathologists, preferably forensic pathologists, and the vice president of Brown University |
| Division of Biological and Medical Sciences and the president of the Rhode Island Funeral |
| Directors Association. Each citizen member shall hold office for the term of his or her their |
| appointment and until his or herthe member’s successor is appointed. Vacancies for citizen |
| members shall be filled by appointment for the unexpired term only The members shall serve |
| without compensation. If a commission member has a conflict of interest, that member must recuse |
| themselves from hearing and determining appeals to decisions by the chief medical examiner |
| regarding the cause and manner of death. The administrator of the office of the state medical |
| examiners, or the administrator’s designee, shall serve as administrator of the commission to |
| provide technical and administrative support. |
| (c) The director of health and the attorney general shall be the chairperson and vice |
| chairperson, respectively, of the commission. The chief medical examiner of the office of state |
| medical examiners shall serve as the executive secretary of the commission, and the expenses of |
| the commission shall be a responsibility of the department of health. The board may elect from |
| among its members such other officers as it deems necessary. Seven (7) members of the board shall |
| constitute a quorum and the vote of a majority of those present and voting shall be required for |
| action. The commission shall meet at the call of its chairperson and at least four (4) times each year, |
| the time and the place for each meeting to be fixed by the chairperson. Except in a case of a finding |
| of homicide, a person of interest may request the office of state medical examiners to make |
| amendments to findings and conclusions on the cause and manner of death recorded on a certificate |
| of death within sixty (60) days after a medical examiner certifies the death certificate. The request |
| to amend the findings and conclusions of a death certificate shall: |
| (1) Be in writing to the chief medical examiner; |
| (2) Clearly describe the requested amendment; |
| (3) State the reason for the change; and |
| (4) Provide a return address. |
| (d) Members of the commission shall be removable by the governor pursuant to the |
| provisions of § 36-1-7 of the general laws and for cause only, and removal solely for partisan or |
| personal reasons unrelated to capacity or fitness for the office shall be unlawful. Within sixty (60) |
| days of receiving the request in writing, the chief medical examiner shall provide the person of |
| interest written notice of the action taken. |
| (e) Within ninety (90) days after the end of each fiscal year, the commission shall approve |
| and submit an annual report to the governor, the speaker of the house of representatives, the |
| president of the senate, and the secretary of state, of its activities during that fiscal year. The report |
| shall provide an operating statement summarizing meetings or hearings held, including meeting |
| minutes, subjects addressed, decisions rendered, appeals considered and their disposition, rules or |
| regulations promulgated, studies conducted, policies and plans developed, approved, or modified, |
| and programs administered or initiated; a consolidated financial statement of all funds received and |
| expended including the source of the funds, a listing of any staff supported by these funds, and a |
| summary of any clerical, administrative or technical support received; a summary of performance |
| during the previous fiscal year including accomplishments, shortcomings and remedies; a synopsis |
| of hearing, complaints, suspensions, or other legal matters related to the authority of the |
| commission; a summary of any training courses held pursuant to this chapter; a briefing on |
| anticipated activities in the upcoming fiscal year; and findings and recommendations for |
| improvements. The report shall be posted electronically on the websites of the general assembly |
| and the secretary of state pursuant to the provisions of § 42-20-8.2. The director of the department |
| of administration shall be responsible for the enforcement of the provisions of this subsection. If |
| the chief medical examiner denies the written request to amend findings and conclusions on the |
| cause and/or manner of death, the person of interest may appeal the denial in writing within fifteen |
| (15) days to the director of health. The director shall refer the matter within fifteen (15) days of the |
| receipt of the appeal request to the state postmortem advisory commission. |
| (f) The commission shall conduct a training course for newly appointed and qualified |
| members within six (6) months of their qualification or designation. The course shall be developed |
| by the chair of the commission, be approved by the commission, and be conducted by the chair of |
| the commission. The commission may approve the use of any commission and/or staff members |
| and/or individuals to assist with training. The training course shall include instruction in the |
| following areas: the provisions of chapters 42-46, 36-14 and 38-2; and the commission’s rules and |
| regulations. The director of the department of administration shall, within ninety (90) days of June |
| 16, 2006, prepare and disseminate training materials relating to the provisions of chapters 42-46, |
| 36-14, and 38-2. The state postmortem advisory commission shall conduct a hearing on the denial |
| and on the establishment of the amendments to the findings and conclusions on the cause and/or |
| manner of death. |
| (g) Upon reviewing the findings of fact submitted to the state postmortem advisory |
| commission, the commission shall recommend a decision to the director of health. The director |
| shall issue a final administrative order within sixty (60) days to: |
| (1) Adopt the recommendation of the commission; or |
| (2) Reject the recommendation of the commission and affirm the original findings of the |
| chief medical examiner. |
| (h) The director’s order shall constitute a final administrative order. If the director rejects |
| the recommendation of the commission, the person of interest may appeal the final administrative |
| order to the Rhode Island superior court. |
| (i) If the final decision of the director, or the decision upon final adjudication on appeal |
| establishes a different finding or conclusion on the cause or manner of death, the chief medical |
| examiner shall amend the death certificate to reflect the change in finding or conclusion. The chief |
| medical examiner shall send a request to amend the death certificate to reflect the final decision to |
| the state registrar of vital records pursuant to § 23-3-4. The registrar of vital records shall amend |
| the death certificate to reflect the final decision. |
| (j) The final decision of the director, or of the court, may not give rise to any presumption |
| concerning the application of any provision of or the resolution of any claim concerning a policy |
| of insurance relating to the deceased. |
| (k) If the findings of the chief medical examiner are upheld by the director, the appellant |
| is responsible for the costs of the contested case hearing based on the billing rates established by |
| the department of health pursuant to § 23-4-13. |
| 23-4-7. Reporting of certain deaths required — Violations — Penalties. |
| (a)(1) Where any person shall die in any manner to suggest the possibility of a criminal act |
| or as the result of violence or apparent suicide, or from a criminal abortion or in any suspicious or |
| unusual manner or circumstances enumerated in § 23-4-4, it shall be the duty of any person having |
| knowledge of those deaths to immediately notify the police of the city or town where the body of |
| the deceased person lies or to notify the office of state medical examiners. The same procedure |
| shall be followed upon discovery of anatomical material suspected of being or determined to be a |
| part of a human body. |
| (2) Any person who willfully neglects or refuses to report that death or who without an |
| order from an agent of the office of medical examiners willfully touches, removes, or disturbs the |
| body of that dead person, or willfully touches, removes, or disturbs the clothing or any article upon |
| or near that body, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor shall be reported to the appropriate law |
| enforcement agency. The body shall not be disturbed without authorization of the medical examiner |
| except in those cases in which a possibility of life remains, whereupon the law enforcement officer |
| or appropriate emergency medical services personnel on the scene shall initiate and facilitate such |
| lifesaving procedures as may be appropriate. After death is declared or pronounced, the body is not |
| to be disturbed, and nothing is to be removed from the body without authorization of the medical |
| examiner. |
| (b) If any person buries or causes to be buried the dead body of a person supposed to have |
| come to a violent death before giving notice as stated in subsection (a) and before inquiry is made |
| into the manner and circumstances of the death, that person shall be guilty of a misdemeanor that |
| person shall be reported to the appropriate law enforcement agency. |
| (c) When any person may appear to have met death when unattended by a physician, or in |
| any unnatural manner, or as the apparent result of the negligence of another person, or as the |
| consequence of any physical or toxic injury incurred while employed, or from the use of any |
| addictive or unidentifiable chemical agent, or from accidental hypothermia, or from an infectious |
| agent capable of spreading an epidemic within the state circumstances or manners enumerated in § |
| 23-4-4, it shall be the duty of any physician, law enforcement officer, funeral director, hospital |
| official having knowledge of the death, or of any other person having responsibility for burial or |
| cremation of the deceased person to notify the office of the state medical examiners. In the case of |
| any prisoner committed by law to the custody of the department of corrections or in the department |
| of behavioral healthcare, developmental disabilities and hospitals who dies or in the case of a person |
| who dies while in the custody of the state police or local police departments of law enforcement as |
| defined by the U.S. Department of Justice, the person charged with the responsibility for that |
| custody shall have the duty to immediately notify the office of the state medical examiners. Any |
| person charged with the responsibility of notifying the office of state medical examiners of any of |
| the deaths stated in the first sentence of this subsection who neglects to give that notice shall upon |
| conviction be guilty of a misdemeanor be reported to the office of the attorney general. |
| (d) If an agent of the office of state medical examiners is of the opinion that a death was |
| caused by the act of neglect of some person other than the deceased, he or shethe agent shall at |
| once notify the attorney general, and the police of the city or town where the body was found or in |
| which it lies. If any person shall be arrested and charged with causing any death by the act of |
| neglect, the person so arrested shall be entitled to receive a copy of the record of the autopsy, upon |
| written request delivered to the attorney general. |
| (e) Where any person age sixty-five (65) years or older may appear to have died from |
| accidental hypothermia or hyperthermia, the death shall be reported to the department of elderly |
| affairs office of healthy aging by the state medical examiner. or |
| (f) when When any person, under the age of eighteen (18) shall die, the physician signing |
| medical professional pronouncing the death certificate shall report the death to the state medical |
| examiner’s office within twenty-four (24) six (6) hours of the death. |
| (f)(g) Any person who violates any of the provisions of subsection (a) or (b) of this section |
| and does so with the intention upon conviction of concealing a felony crime or having knowledge |
| of the commission of any felony offense, shall be guilty of a felony and, upon conviction, shall be |
| fined or imprisoned for a term of not more than five (5) years or fined ten thousand dollars |
| ($10,000), or both in accordance with § 11-1-5. |
| 23-4-8. Procedure for investigation of deaths. |
| (a) When the office of state medical examiners has notice that there has been found or is |
| lying within this state the body of a person who is supposed to have come to his or hertheir death |
| by violence, or in any manner or circumstances as stated in § 23-4-7 this chapter or in rules |
| promulgated by the department, an agent of the office of state medical examiners shall immediately |
| proceed to the place where the body lies and take charge of it, view it, and make personal inquiry |
| into the cause and manner of death determine the medicolegal authority of the case, and if accepted, |
| the office of the state medical examiners shall take jurisdiction of the body and initiate a |
| postmortem investigation. If the body is found at the residence of the deceased, the agent of the |
| office of state medical examiners shall not remove the body from the residence unless necessary |
| for further postmortem examination or autopsy further investigation. |
| (b) A health care facility, healthcare provider, educational institution, correctional |
| institution, or law enforcement agency shall disclose any and all relevant information in its |
| possession including, but not limited to, medical records, educational records, and incident reports, |
| requested by the state medical examiner or his or her agent in connection with the death |
| investigation of the death of a decedent who was a current or former patient, student, or subject of |
| a law enforcement report or case file to the extent necessary as determined by the office of the state |
| medical examiners, in order to assist the medical examiner in determining the cause and manner of |
| death. Law enforcement agencies responding to the scene of a death are required to provide the |
| office of state medical examiners with copies of all related law enforcement reports including, if |
| requested, photographs and videos related to the incident. |
| 23-4-9. Deaths in public places. |
| In the event that a person dies suddenly on a public highway or elsewhere in the public |
| view and the death appears to be from natural causes or the result of injuries received from a |
| highway accident, an agent of the office of the state medical examiners, or the state police or any |
| superior officer of the local police or an agent of the office of state medical examiners, in |
| consultation with and with permission from the office of the state medical examiners may order the |
| removal of the body from the place of death, upon completion of their investigation as to the cause |
| and manner of death, to the funeral home designated by a family representative of the deceased or |
| to the state morgue or any hospital to the office of the state medical examiners or to an alternate |
| location as directed and approved by an agent of the office of state medical examiners. |
| 23-4-10. Disposition of deceased bodies. |
| (a) The office of state medical examiners shall, after any postmortem external examination |
| or any autopsy, promptly release the deceased body to the relatives, representatives, or domestic |
| partners or other persons authorized by law to make arrangements for the disposition of the |
| decedent’s remains. The cost of transporting the deceased body to the office of state medical |
| examiners shall be borne by the state if the autopsy was required to be performed as provided in |
| this chapter. If the relatives, representatives, or domestic partners of the decedent or other person |
| authorized by law to make arrangements for the disposition of the decedent’s remains: |
| (1) Fails or refuses to claim the body within fourteen (14) days of receiving notice of the |
| death of the decedent; or |
| (2) Fails or refuses to make arrangements with a funeral home for the removal of the body |
| from the state medical examiner’s morgue within thirty (30) days of receiving notice of the death |
| of the decedent, then the body shall be deemed unclaimed and shall be buried in accordance with |
| § 40-6-3.10. If there are no known relatives, representatives or domestic partners, after reasonable |
| public notices, the body shall be deemed unclaimed and the office of state medical examiners shall |
| cause the body of the deceased person to be buried in accordance with § 40-6-3.10. The general |
| treasurer of the state shall have first priority in recovering the expenses of burial from the estate of |
| the deceased person. |
| (b) For the purpose of this chapter, “domestic partner” shall be defined as a person who, |
| prior to the decedent’s death, was in an exclusive, intimate, and committed relationship with the |
| decedent, and who certifies by affidavit that their relationship met the following qualifications: |
| (1) Both partners were at least eighteen (18) years of age and were mentally competent to |
| contract; |
| (2) Neither partner is married to anyone else; |
| (3) Partners were not related by blood to a degree that would prohibit marriage in the state |
| of Rhode Island; |
| (4) Partners resided together and had resided together for at least one year at the time of |
| death; and |
| (5) Partners were financially interdependent as evidenced by at least two (2) of the |
| following: |
| (i) Domestic partnership agreement or relationship contract; |
| (ii) Joint mortgage or joint ownership of primary residence; |
| (iii) Two (2) of the following: |
| (A) Joint ownership of motor vehicle; |
| (B) Joint checking account; |
| (C) Joint credit account; |
| (D) Joint lease; and/or |
| (iv) The domestic partner had been designated as a beneficiary for the decedent’s will, |
| retirement contract, or life insurance. |
| (c) The office of the state medical examiners shall, in the event of a multiple or mass |
| fatality, after consultation with the lead investigative agency for the incident, have the authority to |
| order the cremation of recovered comingled remains that were not genetically linked to any single |
| decedent. |
| 23-4-11. Effects and property of deceased. |
| An agent of the office of state medical examiners, as the case may be during the course of |
| investigation of a death, may shall take into his or her their possession all articles and property of |
| the deceased on or about the body as well as other items at the scene that are deemed relevant to |
| the investigation and shall deliver them to the office of the chief state medical examiner examiners |
| if an autopsy or a postmortem examination is ordered, will be performed. but shall otherwise deliver |
| them to a member of the family taking a receipt for them. Provided, however, any The original or |
| a copy of a letter, note, or any other written instrument, the contents of which relate to the manner |
| or cause of the death of the deceased, shall be permanently retained in the files of the office. If an |
| autopsy is ordered, the chief medical examiner shall upon completion of the investigation deliver |
| all other articles or property to a member of the family of the deceased taking a receipt from that |
| family member and, if any dispute exists among members of the family, he or she shall hold the |
| other articles or property for the executor or administrator of the estate of the deceased when |
| appointed. When a funeral home livery service picks up a decedent from the state morgue whose |
| death was investigated by the office of state medical examiners, any personal property of the |
| decedent that was removed prior to or during postmortem examination by the office of state medical |
| examiners shall be released with the body except for personal property that is being held for law |
| enforcement investigation of a crime. Prior to release, the funeral home livery personnel shall sign |
| an itemized receipt of the decedent’s personal property in possession of the office of the state |
| medical examiners. In the event that If death shall have occurred in a hotel or other public place |
| where possessions of the deceased may be lying, an agent of the office of state medical examiners |
| the responding law enforcement agency shall make suitable arrangements for the protection of the |
| property. |
| 23-4-13. Establishment of fees. |
| The director of the department of health shall is authorized to establish fees for autopsy |
| copies of documents such as postmortem reports, cremation certificates, and statistics for |
| authorization of cremations. The director shall is also authorized to establish and impose fees, at an |
| hourly or daily rate, to give testimony in civil suits under this chapter. All fees are as set forth in § |
| 23-1-54. The director is authorized to establish in regulation reasonable fees for copies of additional |
| documents or other case file contents or archive searches not otherwise specified in this section. |
| All of these fees shall be collected and deposited as general revenues; provided, however, that no |
| city or town Rhode Island state agency, or any agency office or department of a city and or town |
| within the state, or the department of human services law enforcement agencies from other states, |
| federal agencies, and hospitals licensed pursuant to chapter 17 of title 23 entitled by law to such |
| documents or other case file contents, shall be required to pay any fees established by the director |
| pursuant to this section. |
| 23-4-14. Preservation of reports — Tabular reports. Annual reports. |
| The director of the department of health shall cause the returns received by the office of |
| state medical examiners and reports made by that office on causes of death for each year, in |
| accordance with this chapter, to be bound together with an index to the volume. The director of |
| health in his or her capacity as ex officio state registrar shall prepare or cause to be prepared from |
| the returns tabular results that will render them of practical utility, and shall annually report thereof |
| in connection with the report of births, marriages, and deaths required by chapter 3 of this title. The |
| office of the state medical examiners shall produce an annual statistical report of all deaths |
| investigated after all cases are closed for a calendar year. The report shall be publicly posted. |
| Annual reports generated shall be retained in keeping with the state’s retention schedule. |
| 23-4-15. Morgue. |
| A centrally located An office and morgue shall be provided with laboratories, furniture the |
| necessary staffing, equipment, records, and supplies that may be required in the to conduct the |
| duties and obligations of the office of state medical examiners as described within this chapter, |
| rules promulgated by the department, and in keeping with applicable accreditation requirements. |
| SECTION 2. Section 23-4-12 of the General Laws in Chapter 23-4 entitled "Office of State |
| Medical Examiners" is hereby repealed. |
| 23-4-12. Compensation for recovery of body from water. |
| When services are rendered in bringing to land the dead body of a person found in any of |
| the harbors, rivers, or waters of the state, compensation for services as he or she deemed reasonable |
| may be allowed; but this privilege shall not entitle any person to compensation for services rendered |
| in search for a dead body. |
| SECTION 3. This act shall take effect upon passage. |
| ======== |
| LC005257/SUB A |
| ======== |