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HB 290 requires OCME to maintain an electronic investigative database; most records are exempt from public inspection, leaving only final autopsy diagnoses publicly accessible.
HB 290 requires OCME to maintain an electronic investigative database; most records are exempt from public inspection, leaving only final autopsy diagnoses publicly accessible.
Office of the Chief Medical Examiner — Disclosure of Autopsy Information and Maintenance of Investigative Database
Status: Hearing (House) 1/22 at 2:00 p.m. (House Health & Government Operations); Effective date (as drafted): October 1, 2025.
Primary sponsor/intro: Chair, Health & Government Operations Committee (By Request — Departmental — Health). Cross-file: SB 115.
The bill is a departmental measure that (1) clarifies what portions of medical examiner records are subject to public inspection under Maryland’s Public Information Act (PIA) and (2) requires the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner (OCME) to maintain an electronic investigative database. The stated intent is to safeguard sensitive postmortem investigative information (witness statements, contact info, medical records, investigative materials) while preserving public access to the final diagnostic conclusions of autopsies.
Definitions
Investigative Database
Public disclosure rule (PIA exception)
Existing case-record practices preserved/clarified
Fees
Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.
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