Can the family or anyone else request or prevent an autopsy?
August 27, 2008
Q. Can the family or anyone else request or prevent an autopsy? A. Before an autopsy can be performed in the instance of a death during a hospital stay, the next of kin must grant permission. However, when state law requires a medical examiner to perform an autopsy, family permission is not required. More Read More →
Who decides if there will be an autopsy?
August 27, 2008
Q. Who decides if there will be an autopsy? A. This depends on who the person was and the circumstances surrounding the death. In Maryland, an individual dying as a result of a homicide, poisoning, suicide, criminal abortion, rape, therapeutic misadventure or drowning, or who died in a suspicious or unusual manner, or who died while apparently healthy, or who is dead on arrival at the hospital will be examined by the medical examiner in the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner in Baltimore. More Read More →
Why are autopsies performed?
August 27, 2008
Q. Why are autopsies performed? A. In Maryland, a death certificate must be completed by a doctor for all deaths before the body can be sent to the funeral home. When the person has a family doctor and dies from natural causes, the doctor can complete the death certificate and an autopsy may be unnecessary. However, if the person is not under the care of a physician or the death appears to be unusual or suspicious in nature or state law requires it, the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner must... More
What is an autopsy?
August 27, 2008
Q. What is an autopsy? A. An autopsy is a series of tests and examinations performed on the body and its internal organs to determine the presence of an injury and/or to identify any disease that may have caused or contributed to the death of a person where the cause is not apparent. Tests are performed to check for the presence of infectious diseases, alcohol or drugs. Source: Andrew G. Slutkin and Jamison G. White specialize in medical malpractice and catastrophic injury law with Silverman,... More
Just call it “Phelps Point”
August 22, 2008
Maybe it’s becoming chic to move to Baltimore.
This spring, Charm City welcomed the newlyweds Jenna Bush and Henry Hager to a $440,000 rowhome in Federal Hill.
But the presidential offspring’s move-in is officially old news now that Michael Phelps has bought a waterfront condo for a $1.69M in Fells Point. The pad reportedly boasts a pool (not Olympic-sized, unfortunately),... More
The bureaucrat, the bribes and the leaky toilet
August 15, 2008
I read a lot about China earlier this month in the buildup to the Olympics (quick aside: U-S-A! U-S-A!) but did not see the story about the bureaucrat, the bribes and the leaky toilet until Thursday. It seems a former transportation official was sentenced to death for accepting $3.2 million from builders in exchange for construction contracts. The bribes were uncovered after an apartment resident called police about water leaking from an abandoned unit above, owned by the bureaucrat. Maintenance... More
Obscenity or therapy? You be the judge
August 12, 2008
In Pennsylvania, a woman has pleaded guilty to violating federal obscenity laws for posting stories on her Web site involving the rape, torture and murder of children. More Read More →
Get the goods on your coworkers’ criminal pasts
August 6, 2008
I am a hardened criminal. A danger to society.
At least, I am according to criminalsearches.com, a new site that promises free, detailed criminal history reports. And I’m assuming the “hardened” part, as apparently my offense was more vicious than those of murderers and rapists. Believe me – I searched for a ton of names.... More
Harnessing Stooge-law power
August 4, 2008
My family had a poodle named Curly when I was younger. While her fur did curl a bit, my dad actually named her after Curly Howard from The Three Stooges. More Read More →
At a loss for words?
July 30, 2008
I never played Scrabulous, the Scrabble imitator W4I1L1D2L1Y4 popular on Facebook. Personally, I don’t like playing regular Scrabble because I view it as a no-win situation as someone who makes a living with words: if I lose, I’m a dope; if I win, I’m supposed to.
Still, I read with interest the decision by the Scrabulous... More
