Bureau of Justice Statistics Medical Examiners and Coroners’ Offices, 2004

About 2,000 medical examiners and coroners' (ME/C) offices provided death investigation services across the United States in 2004. These offices were responsible for the medicolegal investigation of death. They may conduct death scene investigations, perform autopsies, and determine the cause and manner of death when a person has died as a result of violence, under suspicious circumstances, without a physician in attendance, or for other reasons. As of 2004, 16 States had a centralized statewide medical examiner system (see map). Fourteen States had a county coroner system, 7 had a county medical examiner system, and 13 had a mixed county medical examiner and coroner system. Eight States with decentralized death investigation systems also had a State medical examiner office performing medicolegal duties (Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Iowa, Kentucky, Montana, North Dakota, and Tennessee). The District of Columbia reported a city medical examiner office, which functioned similar to a statewide system. ME/C offices employed an estimated 7,320 FTE employees. Estimated annual budgets for these...

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