Affiliation:
1. Deputy Chief Medical Examiner at the Onondaga County Medical Examiner's Office in the Wallie Howard Jr. Center for Forensic Sciences, Pathology at State University of New York Upstate Medical University, and a Part-time Instructor in the Forensic and National Securities Sciences Institute at Syracuse University, Syracuse, NY.
2. Onondaga County Medical Examiner's Office, Syracuse, NY.
Abstract
The death of a person who is incarcerated often raises public concern, family inquiries, and media attention, and such deaths require special handling. The careful investigation of deaths of individuals held in the custody of the corrections system is necessary not only to discover any evidence of abuse, but moreover to ensure that the custodians are cleared of any false allegations of mistreatment. The same logic applies to use-of-force cases resulting in inmate injury but not fatality, in which inmate and correctional officers’ accounts of the events may be incongruous. The forensic pathologist is indispensible in both situations. The purpose of this article is to consider all aspects of the inmate's uniquely vulnerable situation relevant to the forensic pathologist, to review the various types of disease, injury and death occurring in the incarcerated and their relative prevalence, to present a 4.5-year retrospective review of inmate death investigations, and to describe best practices to be utilized in the medicolegal investigation of deaths of incarcerated individuals.
Subject
Pathology and Forensic Medicine
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