COMMENTARY: "It's time to abolish the coroner," published by The Washington Post on his Blog 'The Watch' on December 12, 2107. (Radley Balko blogs about criminal justice, the drug war and civil liberties for The Washington Post. He is the author of the book "Rise of the Warrior Cop: The Militarization of America's Police Forces.")
GIST: Once again, Radley Balko has written a  commentary that defies reduction. But here is a clue, before I turn this illuminating piece over to the reader. "Two San Joaquin County, Calif., medical examiners have resigned in the
 past two weeks, alleging that Sheriff-Coroner Steve Moore pressured 
them to change their autopsy results for deaths in police custody. In 
other instances also involving deaths at the hands of police, they say, 
the sheriff ignored their conclusions completely. Bennet Omalu, 
the chief medical examiner for the county, tendered his resignation on 
Nov. 28, as did a colleague, Susan Parson. (Notable aside: Omalu is the 
medical examiner who exposed the degenerative brain condition found in 
many former NFL players and was the inspiration for the movie “Concussion.”)
 Omalu was hired in 2007 to help professionalize and modernize the 
county medical examiner’s office. In his resignation letter, he said 
that Moore “has always made calculated attempts to control me as a 
physician and influence my professional judgement.”........."To be sure, the states and cities that have adopted a 
medical examiner system aren’t without their problems. Two big ones: 
There are far too few certified medical examiners
 for the number of autopsies that need to be done, and there isn’t 
enough separation between medical examiners and law enforcement. But 
these problems, while important, aren’t endemic to the medical examiner 
systems. With some political will, they could be fixed, or at least 
improved. The problems with the coroner system are more 
fundamental. The very act of electing someone to determine manner of 
death suggests that there’s room for political factors to guide or 
influence that determination. That shouldn’t be something we encourage. 
Put another way, we shouldn’t encourage the idea that there might be 
a Democratic or Republican way to determine whether someone died 
accidentally, committed suicide or was murdered. Instead, let’s 
let each group of professionals do what they’re trained to do. Let 
medical examiners determine the cause of death. In cases in which 
a forensic pathologist has determined a death to be a homicide, let the 
police then investigate. If there was indeed a crime, let officials look
 for a suspect. If a suspect is arrested, let prosecutors determine the 
appropriate charges. Of course, we do elect sheriffs and 
prosecutors. Whether that’s a good idea is another debate. But it’s hard
 to see what good comes from adding another elected office to all of 
that — one that requires little to no specialized training. The 
coroner system isn’t just an anachronism; it’s an anachronism that never
 made much sense in the first place. It’s well past time to get rid of 
it."
