Medical Examiner's Office

The Medical Examiner's Office of the Georgia Bureau of Investigation provides complete forensic pathology services to 153 of Georgia’s 159 counties in deaths which qualify as coroner cases under the Georgia Death Investigation Act. The Chief Medical Examiner for the State of Georgia oversees the GBI’s medical examiner (M.E.) program and also assists in establishing policies and guidelines for all Georgia coroners and local medical examiners.

Autopsies are conducted by GBI medical examiners at the headquarters laboratory in Decatur and in the regional laboratories in Macon and Savannah. Staff at the headquarters medical examiner’s office consists of 11 medical examiners, 17 death investigation specialists, one photographer, one confidential secretaries, one secretary, one quality manager, two transcriptionists, and one assigned assistant deputy director. One of the medical examiners at the headquarters lab specializes in pediatric pathology and the evaluation of fatal and non-fatal pediatric injury.

There are two medical examiners, one transcriptionist/secretary, and four death investigation specialists in the Savannah and Macon Regional Offices. 

Death cases are reported to the Medical Examiner’s Office by coroners, deputy coroners, and law enforcement. The Medical Examiner’s Office determines if an examination will be performed. This office investigates deaths that fall under one or more of the following categories:

  • Those deaths that are apparently homicidal, suicidal, or occurring under suspicious or unknown circumstances
  • Resulting from the unlawful use of controlled substances or the use or abuse of chemicals or toxic agents.
  • Occurring while incarcerated or while in the custody of a law enforcement officer .
  • Apparently accidental or following an injury.
  • By disease, injury or toxic agent during or arising from employment.
  • While not under the care of a physician during the period immediately preceding the death.
  • Related to disease which might constitute a threat to the health of the general public.
  • In which human remains have been disposed of in an offensive manner.

Requests for examinations are received 24 hours a day, 7 days a week by the headquarters section of the M.E.’s Office. Cases accepted for examination are transported to the respective laboratory by transport services provided by the county where the death occurred or where the body was found.

In their examinations of the deceased, forensic pathologists aim to determine the cause and manner of death. Cause is why the person died or the medical reason for the death; that is, the injury or disease responsible for the death. Manner is how the person died or the circumstances that led to the cause of death.

The Georgia Death Investigation Act (O.C.G.A. 45-16-20) requires that the coroner or county medical examiner of the county where the body is found or the death occurs be notified and that a medical examiner's inquiry be made in all deaths that occur in this state that meet the following criteria:

  1. As a result of violence;
  2. By suicide or casualty;
  3. Suddenly when in apparent good health;
  4. When unattended by a physician; no person shall be deemed to have died unattended when the death occurred while the person was a patient of a hospice licensed under Article 9 of Chapter 7 of Title 31 of the Georgia Code.
  5. In any suspicious or unusual manner, with particular attention to those persons 16 years of age and under;
  6. After birth but before seven years of age if the death is unexpected or unexplained;
  7. As a result of an execution carried out pursuant to the imposition of the death penalty under Article 2 of Chapter 10 of Title 17;
  8. When an inmate of a state hospital or a state, county, or city penal institution; or
  9. After having been admitted to a hospital in an unconscious state and without regaining consciousness within 24 hours of admission.

There are five determinations for manner of death:

  1. Homicide - the death was caused by the actions of another person.

Note: Many people, including the media, confuse the terms homicide and murder. Murder is a criminal charge or the unlawful taking of a human life by another. After the medical examiner determines the manner of death to be a homicide, then law enforcement investigate that death to determine if there is probable cause to bring the criminal charge of murder against the person who caused the death. While all murders are homicides, not all homicides are murders. If a homeowner, fearful for his or her life, kills an intruder or a law enforcement officer kills someone in the line of duty, both are considered homicides but not necessarily murder.

  1. Natural - the death was from diseases or medical conditions such as cancer or heart attack.
  2. Accidental - an unintended death
  3. Suicide - a death that is intentionally self-inflicted
  4. Undetermined - there is little or no evidence to establish, with medical