Coroner

Billy AllenBilly Allen

2243 SCR 538
Morton, MS 39117

Phone: 601-537-3392
Fax: 601-537-3590

The office of coroner is filled through an at large election. A county coroner serves a four year term, with the office-holder eligible to immediately succeed themselves.

Requirements:

Each candidate for the office of coroner must, as a minimum,

  • Possess a high school diploma or its equivalent,
  • Be twenty-one (21) years of age or older
  • Be a qualified elector of the county in which elected.
  • Attend the Mississippi Crime Laboratory and State Medical Examiner Death Investigation Training School, successfully completing all exams on the subject matter presented

Each coroner elected is recognized as a county medical examiner (CME) or county medical examiner investigator (CMEI). A CME is a doctor of medicine (M.D.) or osteopathic medicine (D.O.) licensed in the State of Mississippi, while a CMEI is a nonphysician possessing, as a minimum, a high school diploma or its equivalent.

The coroner is then designated as the chief medical examiner or chief medical examiner investigator for the county following the completion of the Death Investigation Training School.

In addition to the successful completion of the Death Investigation Training School, the CME/CMEI must successfully complete additional training on subject material presented by the State Medical Examiner at least once every four (4) years.

Moreover, the CME/CMEI must also receive at least twenty-four (24) hours of continuing education annually. If the continuing education standards are not met, the CME/CMEI is disqualified and removed from office.

The CME/CMEI, with the Board of Supervisors, may appoint deputy medical examiners or deputy medical examiner investigators as deemed necessary. All deputies possess the same authority and duties and are subject to the same qualifications, training, and certification requirements as any CME/CMEI. The CME/CMEI is responsible for assuring readily available death investigators for the county twenty-four (24) hour-a-day for the investigation of all deaths “affecting the public interest.”

A death affecting the public interest includes, but is not limited to, any of the following:

  • Violent death, including homicidal, suicidal or accidental death.
  • Death caused by thermal, chemical, electrical or radiation injury.
  • Death caused by criminal abortion, including self-induced abortion, or abortion related to sexual abuse.
  • Death related to a disease thought to be virulent or contagious which may constitute a public hazard.
  • Death that has occurred unexpectedly or from an unexplained cause.
  • Death of a person confined in a prison, jail or correctional institution.
  • Death of a person where a physician was not in attendance within thirty-six (36) hours preceding death, or in pre-diagnosed terminal or bedfast cases, within thirty (30) days preceding death.
  • Death of a person where the body is not claimed by a relative or a friend.
  • Death of a person where the identity of the deceased is unknown.
  • Death of a child under the age of two (2) years where death results from an unknown cause or where the circumstances surrounding the death indicated that sudden infant death syndrome may be the cause of death.
  • Where a body is brought into this state for disposal and there is reason to believe either that the death was not investigated properly or that there is not an adequate certificate of death.
  • Where a person is presented to a hospital emergency room unconscious and/or unresponsive, with cardiopulmonary resuscitative measures being performed, and dies within twenty-four (24) hours of admission without regaining consciousness or responsiveness, unless a physician was in attendance with thirty-six (36) hours preceding presentation to the hospital, or in cases in which the decedent had a pre-diagnosed terminal or bedfast condition unless a physician was in attendance with thirty (30) days preceding presentation to the hospital.