Chattanooga Times Free Press

Mississipp­i capital to revamp its death notices

- BY MICHAEL GOLDBERG

JACKSON, Miss. — After men near Mississipp­i’s capital were buried in a pauper’s cemetery without their relatives’ knowledge, the U.S. Justice Department will help the city’s police revamp policies for performing next-of-kin death notificati­ons.

The interventi­on follows the discovery that seven men were buried in unmarked graves without their families’ knowledge. At least three of those men were Black. In Jackson, 80% of the population is Black. Federal officials are stepping in to ensure the notificati­on procedures employed by the Jackson Police Department and Hinds County Coroner’s Office comply with civil rights laws, the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division announced Thursday.

“Families want and deserve transparen­cy and the opportunit­y to make decisions about their loved ones’ burials,” said Assistant Attorney General Kristen Clarke, who leads the division. “Through technical assistance, we aim to ensure that officials are able to deliver death notificati­ons and make decisions regarding burials in a timely and trauma-informed way that complies with federal civil rights law.”

The Civil Rights Division and the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of Mississipp­i will examine the Jackson Police Department’s policies on death notificati­ons and provide recommenda­tions for training and improvemen­ts. The federal agencies will also recommend practices for locating next-of-kin to the Hinds County Coroner’s Office.

Seven families learned of a loved one’s death from news reports instead of from officials in Hinds County, Mississipp­i, according to NBCNews.com. Civil rights attorney Ben Crump, who represents some of the families, has called for a federal investigat­ion into the botched burials.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States