The substitute amendment requires the board to issue an initial license in
medicolegal investigation, at no charge, to every individual who is serving as a
nonaccredited medical examiner or medicolegal investigation staff member in this
state on the substitute amendment's effective date. The substitute amendment also
allows an individual who is serving as coroner on the substitute amendment's
effective date to elect to receive such a license. The substitute amendment requires
each such individual to complete, prior to the next license renewal date, 40 hours of
education, except that the substitute amendment allows an individual who holds a
credential, in good standing, from a nationally recognized accreditation organization

specializing in death investigation education to receive a waiver from completing 16
of those 40 hours. The substitute amendment requires the board to provide, at no
cost, the required hours of training to these individuals.
The substitute amendment also requires the board to issue a license in
medicolegal investigation to any individual who is appointed as a nonaccredited
medical examiner or is hired to serve as a medicolegal investigation staff member
after the substitute amendment's effective date, if the individual pays any initial
license fee imposed by the board. The substitute amendment requires such an
individual to complete a 40-hour death investigation training course within 18
months of initial licensure.
Finally, the substitute amendment allows an individual who is not serving as
a medical examiner or medicolegal investigator to obtain a license in medicolegal
investigation from the board if he or she first completes 40 hours of training and pays
any licensure fee established by the board.
The substitute amendment provides that the renewal date for any license in
medicolegal investigation is January 1, 2019, and every four years thereafter. In
order to renew a license, a license holder must pay any renewal fee imposed by the
board and complete 24 hours of education, subject to certain exemptions for initial
renewals.
Medicolegal Investigation Examining Board; powers and duties
The substitute amendment provides for the creation of the 11-member board
in the Department of Safety and Professional Services, to be composed of two
individuals who are coroners, chief deputy coroners, or deputy coroners; two
individuals who are nonaccredited medical examiners or medicolegal investigation
staff members; two accredited medical examiners; a member of the Wisconsin
District Attorneys' Association; members of two specified law enforcement
organizations; the attorney general or his or her designee; and one public member,
appointed for six-year terms. The substitute amendment requires the board to do
all of the following:
1. Promulgate rules specifying standards and curricula for training and
education requirements for individuals holding a license in medicolegal
investigation issued by the board.
2. Coordinate and provide, on a regional basis, training and education for
holders of licenses issued by the board at no cost to those license holders.
3. Monitor compliance with the licensure requirements created by the
substitute amendment.
4. Revoke the license of a license holder who fails to complete the required death
investigation course.
5. Provide the required training and education to license holders. The
substitute amendment allows the board to impose fees for licenses issued after the
substitute amendment's effective date and for license renewals.
The substitute amendment also requires the board, if a license is revoked or not
renewed for any reason, to do any of the following that applies to the license holder:
1. If the license holder is a nonaccredited medical examiner, send a statement
to the county board or county executive, if applicable, for any county in which the

license holder serves, recommending dismissal of the nonaccredited medical
examiner because of the revocation or failure to renew the license.
2. If the license holder is a medicolegal investigation staff member, send a
notice to the office in which the individual works notifying the coroner or medical
examiner of the revocation or failure to renew the license.
The substitute amendment requires an individual who is appointed as a
nonaccredited medical examiner or is hired to serve as a medicolegal investigation
staff member, and who leaves his or her position as a medical examiner or
medicolegal investigation staff member, to so inform the board.
The substitute amendment appropriates to the board all moneys received from
licensure fees for medicolegal investigators licensed by the board.
Notifications
The substitute amendment requires a coroner or medical examiner who
receives notice of a death to notify the deceased's next of kin. The substitute
amendment provides that a coroner or medical examiner need not notify the district
attorney of certain types of reported deaths if the district attorney has waived notice
in writing.
Handling of personal property
The substitute amendment requires a coroner or medical examiner to maintain
an inventory of personal property that the coroner or medical examiner takes from
a death scene or from a deceased. The substitute amendment specifies that the
coroner or medical examiner must destroy, in accordance with applicable county
evidence retention policies and standards for disposal of medications, or donate to
a drug repository program any prescription medications that the coroner or medical
examiner collects in an investigation and does not provide to a law enforcement
agency.
Disposition of bodies
Authorization to embalm or dispose of a body. The substitute amendment
requires an authorization from the coroner or medical examiner to embalm the body
of a person whose death must be reported. The substitute amendment specifies
certain information that a coroner or medical examiner must include on an
authorization to embalm a body.
Cremation permit. The substitute amendment provides that even when a death
is caused by a contagious or infectious disease, the body may not be cremated within
48 hours of the pronouncement of death unless the body must be cremated
immediately to effectively contain the disease or a public health authority orders the
sooner disposal of the body during a state of emergency that is related to public
health. The substitute amendment requires that, if the medical certification of the
cause and manner of death on a death certificate is completed by a physician, the
coroner or medical examiner must review the medical certification before issuing a
cremation permit. The substitute amendment further requires that a coroner or
medical examiner must specify on a cremation permit the earliest date and time that
cremation may occur.
Authorization to disinter and reinter. The substitute amendment clarifies that
no person, other than a cemetery, may disinter a body or human remains without

authorization from the coroner or medical examiner. The substitute amendment
adds, as a condition for obtaining a coroner's or medical examiner's authorization for
disinterment without a court order, that the person requesting authorization provide
proof of intent to cremate or bury the disinterred remains.
Disposition of unidentified or unclaimed bodies. This substitute amendment
provides that, if a person other than the superintendent of a state, county, or
municipal institution has an unidentified or unclaimed body, the person may notify
the coroner or medical examiner in the county of residence of the deceased, who must
bury or cremate the body. The substitute amendment further provides that, if the
coroner or medical examiner makes reasonable efforts to identify a body and notify
the deceased's representative of disposal of the body, the coroner or medical examiner
is immune from civil liability for his or her choice of method for disposing of the body.
Under current law, if an inmate of a state, county, or municipal institution dies, and
a relative or friend of the deceased does not claim the body and a medical or mortuary
school does not take the body, the superintendent of the institution must bury the
body.
Mental health treatment records
This substitute amendment provides a coroner or medical examiner access to
a deceased's mental health treatment records without informed consent for the
purpose of completing a medical certification on a certificate of death or for
conducting a death investigation. Under current law, a coroner or medical examiner
may obtain a deceased's health care records without informed consent for the
purpose of completing a medical certification on a certificate of death or for
conducting a death investigation.
The people of the state of Wisconsin, represented in senate and assembly, do
enact as follows:
SB712-SSA1,1 1Section 1. 15.405 (18) of the statutes is created to read:
SB712-SSA1,5,52 15.405 (18) Medicolegal investigation examining board. There is created a
3medicolegal investigation examining board in the department of safety and
4professional services that shall consist of the following members appointed for
56-year terms:
SB712-SSA1,5,76 (a) Two individuals, each of whom is a coroner, chief deputy coroner, or deputy
7coroner.
SB712-SSA1,6,28 (am) Two individuals, each of whom is a nonaccredited medical examiner, as
9defined in s. 465.01 (4), or a medicolegal investigation staff member, as defined in s.

1465.01 (3), other than a medicolegal investigation staff member included under par.
2(a).
SB712-SSA1,6,43 (b) Two individuals, each of whom is an accredited medical examiner, as defined
4in s. 465.01 (1g).
SB712-SSA1,6,55 (c) One member of the Wisconsin District Attorneys' Association.
SB712-SSA1,6,66 (d) One member of the Badger State Sheriffs Association.
SB712-SSA1,6,77 (e) One member of the Wisconsin Chiefs of Police Association.
SB712-SSA1,6,88 (g) The attorney general or his or her designee.
SB712-SSA1,6,99 (i) One public member.
SB712-SSA1,2 10Section 2. 20.165 (1) (g) of the statutes is amended to read:
SB712-SSA1,6,1911 20.165 (1) (g) General program operations. The amounts in the schedule for
12the licensing, rule making, and regulatory functions of the department, other than
13the licensing, rule-making, and credentialing functions of the medical examining
14board and the affiliated credentialing boards attached to the medical examining
15board and except for preparing, administering, and grading examinations. Ninety
16percent of all moneys received under chs. 440 to 480, except ch. chs. 448 and 465 and
17ss. 440.03 (13), and 440.05 (1) (b), and, less $10 of each renewal fee received under
18s. 452.12 (5); all moneys transferred from the appropriation under par. (i); and all
19moneys received under s. 440.055 (2), shall be credited to this appropriation.
SB712-SSA1,3 20Section 3. 20.165 (1) (hr) of the statutes is created to read:
SB712-SSA1,6,2421 20.165 (1) (hr) Medicolegal investigation examining board; program revenues.
22All moneys received from fees imposed for licenses issued under s. 465.10 to provide
23training and education to individuals licensed under s. 465.10 and to support the
24medicolegal investigation examining board in performing its duties and functions.
SB712-SSA1,4 25Section 4. 51.30 (4) (b) 29. of the statutes is created to read:
SB712-SSA1,7,10
151.30 (4) (b) 29. Following the death of a patient, to a coroner, deputy coroner,
2medical examiner or medical examiner's assistant, for the purpose of completing a
3medical certificate under s. 69.18 (2) or investigating a death under s. 979.01 or
4979.10. The health care provider may release information by initiating contact with
5the office of the coroner or medical examiner without receiving a request for release
6of the information and shall release information upon receipt of an oral or written
7request for the information from the coroner, deputy coroner, medical examiner or
8medical examiner's assistant. The recipient of any information under this
9subdivision shall keep the information confidential except as necessary to comply
10with s. 69.18, 979.01 or 979.10.
SB712-SSA1,5 11Section 5. 69.01 (12) of the statutes is amended to read:
SB712-SSA1,7,1612 69.01 (12) "Final disposition" means the disposition of a corpse or stillbirth by
13burial, interment, entombment, cremation, delivery to a university or school under
14s. 157.02 (3) (1m) (c), or delivery to a medical or dental school anatomy department
15under s. 157.06. "Final disposition" does not include disposition of the ashes
16produced by cremation of a corpse or stillbirth.
SB712-SSA1,6 17Section 6. 69.18 (2) (d) 1. of the statutes is amended to read:
SB712-SSA1,8,218 69.18 (2) (d) 1. Except as provided under par. (e), if a the manner of death is
19not natural and
is the subject of a coroner's or medical examiner's determination
20investigated by a coroner or medical examiner under s. 979.01 or 979.03, the coroner
21or medical examiner or a physician supervised by a coroner or medical examiner in
22the county where the event which caused the death occurred shall complete and sign
23the medical certification for the death and mail the death certificate within 5 days
24after the pronouncement of death or present the certificate to the person responsible

1for filing the death certificate under sub. (1)
within 6 days after the pronouncement
2of death.
SB712-SSA1,7 3Section 7. 69.18 (2) (d) 2. of the statutes is amended to read:
SB712-SSA1,8,104 69.18 (2) (d) 2. Except as provided under par. (e), if the decedent was not under
5the care of a physician for the illness or condition from which the person died, the
6coroner or medical examiner, or a physician supervised by a coroner or medical
7examiner, in the county of the place of death shall complete and sign the medical
8certification for the death and mail the death certificate within 5 days after the
9pronouncement of death or present the certificate to the person responsible for filing
10the death certificate under sub. (1)
within 6 days after the pronouncement of death.
SB712-SSA1,8 11Section 8. 69.18 (2) (d) 3. of the statutes is amended to read:
SB712-SSA1,8,1812 69.18 (2) (d) 3. For a medical certification under this paragraph, except a
13medical certification of the cause of death of an indigent, a coroner or medical
14examiner may charge a fee established by the county board, not to exceed an amount
15reasonably related to the actual and necessary cost of providing the medical
16certification. The coroner or medical examiner, or the physician employed by the
17coroner or medical examiner, shall mail or present complete and sign a medical
18certification as required under subd. 1., whether or not the fee has been paid.
SB712-SSA1,9 19Section 9. 69.18 (3) (a) of the statutes is amended to read:
SB712-SSA1,9,420 69.18 (3) (a) Except as provided under par. (c) or (e), the person who has moved
21a corpse under sub. (1) (a) shall complete a report for final disposition, on a form
22supplied by the state registrar, and, within 24 hours after being notified of the death,
23mail or present a copy of the report to the coroner or medical examiner in the county
24of the place of death and mail or present a copy to the local registrar in the
25registration district of the place of death. If the cause of death is subject to an

1investigation
must be reported to a coroner or medical examiner under s. 979.01 or
2if the death is subject to investigation under s. 979.03, the report for final disposition
3shall be submitted to the coroner or medical examiner in the county in which the
4event which caused the death occurred.
SB712-SSA1,10 5Section 10. 69.18 (3) (b) of the statutes is amended to read:
SB712-SSA1,9,106 69.18 (3) (b) If a medical certification for a corpse is required under sub. (2) (d),
7no person may embalm the corpse or effect its final disposition without satisfying the
8requirements for a report under par. (a) and without obtaining the written
9permission of the person required to complete the medical certification under sub.
10(2) (d) or an authorization to embalm a body under s. 979.105.
SB712-SSA1,11 11Section 11. 69.18 (3) (d) of the statutes is amended to read:
SB712-SSA1,9,1912 69.18 (3) (d) No person may remove a corpse from this state if the place of death
13was in this state unless the corpse is accompanied by a copy of the report for final
14disposition. If a medical certification is required for the corpse under sub. (2) (d), the
15corpse must be accompanied by the report and the written permission of the coroner
16or medical examiner to embalm and effect final disposition or an authorization to
17embalm a body under s. 979.105
. No person may remove a stillbirth from this state
18if the delivery of the stillbirth was in this state unless the stillbirth is accompanied
19by a report for final disposition.
SB712-SSA1,12 20Section 12. 69.18 (4) (a) (intro.) of the statutes is renumbered 69.18 (4) (c) and
21amended to read:
SB712-SSA1,9,2522 69.18 (4) (c) Subject to s. 157.111, the coroner or medical examiner of the county
23in which a decedent's corpse is interred shall issue an authorization a permit for
24disinterment and reinterment upon receipt of an order of a court of competent
25jurisdiction or upon receipt of a written application for disinterment and reinterment

1signed by the person in charge of the disinterment and by any of the following
2persons, in order of priority stated, when persons in prior classes are not available
3at the time of application, and in the absence of actual notice of contrary indications
4by the decedent or actual notice of opposition by a member of the same or a prior
5class:
.
SB712-SSA1,13 6Section 13. 69.18 (4) (a) 1g. to 6. of the statutes are renumbered 69.18 (4) (am)
71g. to 6.
SB712-SSA1,14 8Section 14. 69.18 (4) (am) (intro.) of the statutes is created to read:
SB712-SSA1,10,119 69.18 (4) (am) (intro.) In this subsection, "representative of the decedent"
10means any member of the following classes of individuals, in the order of priority
11listed:
SB712-SSA1,15 12Section 15. 69.18 (4) (b) of the statutes is created to read:
SB712-SSA1,10,1513 69.18 (4) (b) Except as provided in s. 157.112 (3), no person may disinter a
14human corpse from a grave or tomb without first obtaining a disinterment permit
15under par. (c) or (d).
SB712-SSA1,16 16Section 16. 69.18 (4) (bm) of the statutes is repealed.
SB712-SSA1,17 17Section 17. 69.18 (4) (d) of the statutes is created to read:
SB712-SSA1,10,2218 69.18 (4) (d) Subject to s. 157.111, the coroner or medical examiner of the county
19in which a decedent's corpse is interred shall issue a disinterment permit upon
20receipt of a written application for disinterment that is made and signed by a
21representative of the decedent and signed by the person in charge of disinterment
22if all of the following apply:
SB712-SSA1,10,2423 1. No representative of the decedent who is a member of a prior class under par.
24(am) is available at the time the application is made.
SB712-SSA1,11,2
12. The coroner or medical examiner does not have actual notice that the
2decedent would have opposed the disinterment.
SB712-SSA1,11,53 3. The coroner or medical examiner does not have actual notice of opposition
4to disinterment by a representative of the decedent who is a member of the same or
5a prior class under par. (am) as the applicant.
SB712-SSA1,11,76 4. The applicant provides proof of intent to cremate the decedent's corpse or to
7lawfully inter the decedent's corpse in a specified burial place.
SB712-SSA1,18 8Section 18. 69.18 (4) (e) of the statutes is created to read:
SB712-SSA1,11,109 69.18 (4) (e) No person may cremate a corpse disinterred under this subsection
10without obtaining a cremation permit under s. 979.10 (1) (ag).
SB712-SSA1,19 11Section 19. 69.18 (4) (f) of the statutes is created to read:
SB712-SSA1,11,1412 69.18 (4) (f) Except as provided in s. 157.112 (3), no person may disinter a
13decedent's cremated remains from a cemetery unless all of the following conditions
14are satisfied:
SB712-SSA1,11,1515 1. The cemetery authority, or its designee, consents to disinterment.
SB712-SSA1,11,1816 2. A representative of the decedent consents to disinterment and no other
17representative of the decedent who is a member of the same or a prior class under
18par. (am) objects to disinterment.
SB712-SSA1,20 19Section 20. 69.20 (2) (a) 2. of the statutes is amended to read:
SB712-SSA1,11,2220 69.20 (2) (a) 2. For a certificate of death, any of the persons specified under s.
2169.18 (4) (a) (am) 1g. to 6. or an individual who is authorized in writing by one of the
22persons.
SB712-SSA1,21 23Section 21. 157.02 (1), (2), (3), (4) and (5) of the statutes are renumbered
24157.02 (1m) (a), (b), (c), (d) and (e), and 157.02 (1m) (b) and (e), as renumbered, are
25amended to read:
SB712-SSA1,12,5
1157.02 (1m) (b) Time allowed relative to act. If a relative or friend fails to
2arrange for taking charge of the corpse within a reasonable time after death, the
3superintendent or other officer may proceed as provided in this section subsection,
4but relatives or friends may claim the corpse at any time before it has been delivered
5pursuant to sub. (3) par. (c).
SB712-SSA1,12,76 (e) Other disposition. If the corpse is not disposed of under subs. (1) to (4) pars.
7(a) to (d)
, the superintendent or public officer shall properly bury it.
SB712-SSA1,22 8Section 22. 157.02 (1m) (title) of the statutes is created to read:
SB712-SSA1,12,99 157.02 (1m) (title) Disposition of inmate's remains.
SB712-SSA1,23 10Section 23. 157.02 (2m) of the statutes is created to read:
SB712-SSA1,12,1811 157.02 (2m) Disposition of other unclaimed remains. (a) If a person, other
12than a person who has responsibility to dispose of a corpse under sub. (1m), has the
13corpse of a deceased individual and cannot by exercise of reasonable effort locate a
14representative of the decedent, as defined in s. 69.18 (4) (am), or a representative of
15the decedent refuses to claim the corpse for disposition, the person may notify the
16coroner or medical examiner in the county of residence of the deceased, and the
17coroner or medical examiner shall take custody of the corpse and cause the corpse
18to be decently buried or cremated.
SB712-SSA1,12,2119 (b) A coroner or medical examiner is immune from civil liability for his or her
20choice of method for disposing of an unidentified corpse under this subsection if the
21coroner or medical examiner made reasonable efforts to identify the corpse.
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