Chattanooga Times Free Press

Tennessee lawmakers seeking to make autopsy results secret

- BY NATALIE NEYSA ALUND

Despite a strong push to keep the records public in Tennessee, two Republican lawmakers are sponsoring a bill that would make the results of autopsies conducted by state and county medical examiners secret.

The legislatio­n is sponsored by Rep. Eddie Smith, R-Knoxville, and Sen. Joey Hensley, R-Hohenwald, a physician who also is the medical examiner for Lewis County. Both say having the forensic findings available to the public can be difficult for family members of the dead and means family medical conditions may become public.

Although autopsy reports can be sensitive, critics of the bill say the reports are also vital resources to help ensure government accountabi­lity and that those in the criminal justice system adequately perform their duties, especially when suspicious deaths are involved.

“It’s important autopsy reports remain open in cases when there are questions about the death,” said Deborah Fisher, executive director of the Tennessee Coalition for Open Government. “This bill closes everything, things that can be used for accountabi­lity.”

The bill, approved by the

House health subcommitt­ee last week, seeks to keep confidenti­al “the records of the results of investigat­ion, of postmortem examinatio­ns, of the findings of autopsies and toxicologi­cal laboratory examinatio­ns, including certified reports of the toxicologi­cal laboratory examinatio­ns performed by the testing laboratory.”

Smith, who works in event and production management, said the bill was brought to him by Dr. Darinka Mileusnic Polchan, the county medical examiner for Knox and Anderson counties.

Smith met Monday with Carol Daniels, executive director of the Tennessee Press Associatio­n. After that meeting, the Knoxville Republican said his intent was to protect confidenti­al medical informatio­n about family members that was not directly related to a deceased’s cause of death.

He said he wanted to work with government transparen­cy advocates to reach an agreement on the bill.

Speaking to the subcommitt­ee last week, Mileusnic-Polchan testified about a case she had several years ago involving the death of a baby who had a herpes infection passed along from the mother.

Mileusnic-Polchan said the mother had been in an abusive relationsh­ip, had a second chance in life, and in her own words, knew she had killed her newborn. The sum, she said, was devastatin­g enough without having everyone, including family and neighbors, learn she had herpes.

Under the proposed bill, the results of the government autopsies in all those situations would be kept secret except for “those who need them for official purposes,” said John Lott with the Knox County Regional Forensics Center. He also spoke to the subcommitt­ee alongside state Chief Medical Examiner Julia Goodin, who said she supported the bill.

Current law already protects medical records of the dead. Those are not public records, along with “law enforcemen­t investigat­ive reports, and photograph­s, video and other images of deceased persons. ”

Tennessee law allows a county medical examiner to perform autopsies in these cases: Homicide, suspected homicide, suicide, a violent, unnatural or suspicious death, unexpected apparent natural death in adults, sudden unexpected infant and child deaths, deaths believed to represent a threat to public health or safety, and executed prisoners.

But Mileusnic-Polchan said some cases, such as homicides, suicides and elder abuse deaths, are privileged informatio­n and should be kept confidenti­al because they’re already painful enough for families without having “more informatio­n out there.”

As an example, she referenced the brutal death of a young couple in Knoxville about 10 years ago.

“I know it’s going to go through the courts, but … the brutality of what they went through, this young couple, was just too much even for me to bear,” she said. “Why does it need to be out there in the public?”

But Fisher said the findings help to ensure “the account” of what happened.

“It could be the autopsy shows something completely different,” Fisher said in a telephone interview Monday. “It clears up exactly what happened, and that’s important to have. It helps get the truth out there.”

In 2015, the Knoxville News Sentinel used an autopsy report to disclose that a parolee was running away from a Knoxville police officer when shot. Authoritie­s had said the officer was in a lifeor-death struggle with the man. But the autopsy showed six gunshot wounds from behind, all but one from more than 3 feet away.

The Commercial Appeal in Memphis used an autopsy report two decades ago to reveal that a Memphis Police Department SWAT team shot a 7-year-old through the head during a botched raid at a public housing complex. If the reports had been closed, that would have never come to light.

Fisher said the public should have access to the cause and manner of death in situations in which the government requires an autopsy.

“The government pays for them — uses taxpayer dollars,” Fisher said. “They are done because the state thinks there’s a public interest in determinin­g the cause of death either for public safety reasons or public health reasons.”

Last year The Tennessean used autopsy reports on a story about how opioid deaths are underrepor­ted. It also used autopsy reports to show dangerous new drugs are on the uptick in the state.

In 2011 the nonprofit reporting organizati­on Pro Publica found more than three dozen cases in which neglect, abuse and even murder of seniors in nursing homes had escaped the notice of authoritie­s. The nationwide investigat­ion relied heavily on autopsy reports and was part of a larger examinatio­n of shortcomin­gs in the nation’s coroner and medical examiner offices.

Regarding Mileusnic Polchan’s mention of the newborn baby case, Fisher made note that to her knowledge the media did not even report on it.

“Just because it’s a public record doesn’t mean the news media is going to report on it,” Fisher said.

The proposed legislatio­n goes Tuesday to the House Health Committee to be voted on.

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Eddie Smith Joey Hensley

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