| Coroner White County, Arkansas |
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Arkansas State Board of Embalmers & Funeral Directors
County Coroner's Manual
The County Coroner is most often a part-time job in county government and is utilized on
an as-needed basis. The coroner is called upon to hold an inquest to establish cause of
death that has occurred under violent or suspicious circumstances An inquest may he
accomplished by a postmortem autopsy, or by calling a coroner's jury (ACA 16-83-102). They
signs death certificates if there is no doctor present.
Arkansas Eye Bank and
Laboratory.
What is a Coroner's Inquest?
A Coroners Inquest is neither a civil nor a criminal trial proceeding. It is simply
an inquiry into the manner and cause of an individuals death.
An Inquest is conducted by the Coroner or Deputy Coroner with a court reporter and six
jurors present. The jurors are citizens of DuPage County, the county in which the death
took place.
The purpose of the inquest is to present pertinent information concerning the
victims death in order for the jury to arrive at a cause and manner of death. The
cause of death is often readily apparent and obvious, based on the facts, circumstances,
medical evidence and in some cases, toxicology and autopsy results. The real essence of
the jurors responsibility is to establish the manner of death, which could be:
Suicide
Homicide
Accident
Natural
Undetermined
The Coroner will summon to the inquest the individuals who have pertinent information
concerning the incident. This often includes, but is not limited to, the person who found
the deceased, witnesses to the incident, those involved, police officers and
investigators, and in some instances, a direct relative. All individuals summoned will
present testimony (answer questions) to the jury. Any professional reports (autopsy,
toxicology, x-ray and laboratory reports) will be presented at that time. These reports
are not released to the public until the inquest procedures are concluded.
All information and testimony at the inquest is recorded and/or transcribed by a certified
court reporter. The inquest is open to the public and may not be closed pursuant to any
requests to do so. Anyone may attend.
Upon completion of the testimony, the Coroners jury will deliberate in private. They
may request additional testimony, evidence, or conference as they deem necessary. When the
jury has concluded their deliberations, they will issue a verdict through the foreman as
to the cause and manner of death( accident, homicide, natural, suicide or undetermined).
The Corners verdict has no civil or criminal trial significance. The verdict and
inquest proceedings are merely fact finding in nature and statistical in purpose. However,
if a person is implicated as the unlawful slayer of the deceased or accessory thereto, an
arrest may be affected. This is extremely rare, as this function is now performed by the
States Attorneys grand jury proceedings.
The testimony presented at the inquest is sworn and under oath and properly documented
and/or recorded. Because of this, testimony may subsequently be used in perjury
proceedings if such testimony should change in future civil or criminal trial proceedings.