Chicago Sun-Times

THE WATCHDOGS: Toni Preckwinkl­e wants to weaken law her medical examiner doesn’t follow

Preckwinkl­e wants to weaken county ordinance that requires on- site visits for medical examiners

- BY ROBERT HERGUTH AND TIM NOVAK Staff Reporters

The Cook County medical examiner’s office routinely fails to abide by a requiremen­t that it send an investigat­or to the scene of every suspicious death, including all homicides and suicides.

Now, saying it can’t afford to do that, Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkl­e has come up with a Chicago- style solution: water down the county ordinance that requires the on- site visits.

The ordinance says a medical examiner’s “representa­tive shall go to the location of the body” and begin an “investigat­ion with an examinatio­n of the scene” — though the agency and Preckwinkl­e dispute that that’s a requiremen­t.

Still, Preckwinkl­e is moving to change the ordinance so the office instead would be given “discretion” about whether to make “a scene examinatio­n,” based on “generally accepted guidelines for conducting medicolega­l death investigat­ions.”

The change would “clarify that scene investigat­ions are assigned as necessary and at the discretion of the medical examiner just like autopsies,” Preckwinkl­e spokeswoma­n Becky Schlikerma­n says.

Preckwinkl­e and Dr. Ponni Arunkumar, the chief medical examiner she hired, have maintained that they would need more staff and that it would be too costly for the county — facing an anticipate­d budget shortfall next year of $ 82 million — to get someone to the site of each suspicious death in Chicago and the Cook County suburbs.

“It is the goal of the medical examiner’s office to continue to increase scene investigat­ions because such investigat­ions can assist the forensic pathologis­ts in their tasks,” Schlikerma­n says. “However, the office has to triage what cases get scene visits based on the circumstan­ces of each case, case load and staffing levels. In addition, it would cost approximat­ely $ 5 million to increase the staffing level to be able to go to each of the thousands of cases.”

But the Chicago Sun- Times reported in February that, over a three- year span, there were 130 days when the agency’s investigat­ors didn’t go out on even one death — even on cases that were found to be homicides, suicides and accidents. Overall, the medical examiner’s office went to fewer than one of every five death scenes.

Thousands of bodies a year are brought to the county morgue on the West Side so the medical examiner’s pathologis­ts can perform autopsies or less- intrusive examinatio­ns to determine how they died. Their rulings often influence whether and how the police investigat­e those deaths.

The pathologis­ts have about two dozen investigat­ors to collect informatio­n to help make those determinat­ions. They view the scene, record details and sometimes talk with families or get medical and prescripti­on histories.

Under Arunkumar, the investigat­ors’ priorities have been to visit the scenes of possible homicides, suicides and child deaths. But they don’t come close to getting out to all of those scenes, often relying instead on the police to provide details.

County officials have said they don’t know of a single case in which not going to the scene of a death has compromise­d an investigat­ion.

The Sun- Times has reported that the FBI believes that the 2015 shooting death of offduty Chicago Police Sgt. Donald Markham, who was found dead in his bed of a gunshot wound to the head, was a homicide — and not a suicide, as one of Arunkumar’s pathologis­ts ruled.

The FBI met with Arunkumar and others in the office in December to make its case that the medical examiner was wrong in finding, as the police told the agency, that Markham killed himself after arguing with his wife, also a Chicago cop.

The city of Chicago’s inspector general is investigat­ing whether the police might have botched or rigged the investigat­ion.

The medical examiner’s office has said it didn’t send out an investigat­or because it wasn’t notified by the Chicago police until the body already was en route to the morgue in a police vehicle.

Preckwinkl­e’s proposal also would mandate police immediatel­y notify the agency of deaths.

Last month, the Sun- Times reported that the medical examiner’s office is conducting an unpreceden­ted review of more than 200 cases handled by Dr. John Cavanaugh, one of its former pathologis­ts, for errors that included missing a murder.

Last week, the newspaper reported the agency hired an investigat­or who was charged with shooting his fiancée in the legs.

“THE OFFICE HAS TO TRIAGE WHAT CASES GET SCENE VISITS BASED ON THE CIRCUMSTAN­CES OF EACH CASE, CASE LOAD AND STAFFING LEVELS. IN ADDITION, IT WOULD COST APPROXIMAT­ELY $ 5 MILLION TO INCREASE THE STAFFING LEVEL TO BE ABLE TO GO TO EACH OF THE THOUSANDS OF CASES.” BECKY SCHLIKERMA­N, spokeswoma­n for Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkl­e

 ?? SUN- TIMES FILE PHOTO ?? Faced with the medical examiner’s routine failure to visit death scenes, Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkl­e is moving to do away with that requiremen­t.
SUN- TIMES FILE PHOTO Faced with the medical examiner’s routine failure to visit death scenes, Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkl­e is moving to do away with that requiremen­t.
 ??  ?? Dr. Ponni Arunkumar
Dr. Ponni Arunkumar

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