IL 20-001 April 16, 2020

Does Illinois law prevent county coroners from collecting, transporting, or storing bodies during a declared public health emergency like COVID-19?

Short answer: No. The AG concluded in 2020 that nothing in division 3-3 of the Counties Code blocked coroners from helping with mass-fatality response during a declared disaster. The Emergency Management Act and the Department of Public Health Act actively contemplated that coroners would play a critical role in fatality management when local resources were overwhelmed.
Currency note: this opinion is from 2020
Subsequent statutory amendments, court decisions, or later AG opinions may have changed the analysis. Treat this page as historical context, not current legal advice. Verify current law before relying on any specific rule, deadline, or remedy mentioned here.
Disclaimer: This is an official Illinois Attorney General opinion. AG opinions are persuasive authority but not binding precedent. This summary is for informational purposes only and is not legal advice. Consult a licensed Illinois attorney for advice on your specific situation.

Subject

Role of County Coroners in Fatality Management Resulting from Infectious Disease Pandemic

Category

EMERGENCY PREPAREDNESS

Plain-English summary

In April 2020, with COVID-19 cases climbing in Illinois and Governor Pritzker's disaster proclamations active, IEMA director Alicia Tate-Nadeau asked whether coroners were prevented by the Counties Code from taking possession of and storing dead bodies whose deaths were caused by COVID-19. Some coroners had been hesitant because the Counties Code limits their ordinary investigative jurisdiction to specific kinds of suspicious or unattended deaths, and many COVID-19 deaths happened under physician care.

The AG said the Counties Code did not block them. Division 3-3 sets out coroners' default duties for routine investigations, but says nothing about emergencies. The Emergency Management Act gives the Governor broad power, once a disaster is declared, to use state and political-subdivision resources, including those of coroners. The Department of Public Health has "supreme authority" in matters of quarantine and isolation under 20 ILCS 2305/2, and coroners have long-standing duties under that authority to label remains as infection hazards and to report deaths suspected to involve communicable disease. So during a declared public health emergency, coroners were not just permitted to help with fatality management but were called on to do so.

Currency note

This opinion was issued in 2020. Subsequent statutory amendments, court decisions, or later AG opinions may have changed the analysis. Treat this page as historical context, not current legal advice. Verify current law before relying on any specific rule, deadline, or remedy mentioned here.

In particular, the COVID-19 disaster proclamations referenced here have long since expired. Illinois has also revisited certain Emergency Management Act and Department of Public Health authorities since 2020. Anyone planning fatality management for a future emergency should reconfirm current statutory and regulatory authority.

Background and statutory framework

The opinion sits at the intersection of three Illinois statutory regimes.

The Counties Code, division 3-3 (55 ILCS 5/3-3001 through 3-3045) sets out the duties of county coroners. Section 3-3013 lists the deaths that trigger a coroner's investigative jurisdiction: sudden or violent death (suicide, homicide, accidents); deaths from sex crimes; deaths under suspicious or unexplained circumstances; deaths where alcohol or drug addiction may have contributed; and deaths of persons not attended by a licensed physician. For those covered deaths, the coroner "shall go to the place where the dead body is, and take charge of the same and shall make a preliminary investigation into the circumstances of the death." Many COVID-19 victims were under physician care, so their deaths might not trigger the section 3-3013 duty.

But division 3-3 is silent on emergency-time roles. It does not say coroners are limited to those investigations.

The Emergency Management Act (20 ILCS 3305/1 et seq.) was enacted to make sure Illinois could respond to disasters. Section 4 defines "disaster" to include "epidemic" and "public health emergencies." A "public health emergency" is defined as "an occurrence or imminent threat of an illness or health condition" believed to be caused by, among other things, "the appearance of a novel * * * infectious agent" that poses a high probability of large numbers of deaths or widespread exposure. COVID-19 fit that definition.

Once the Governor declares a disaster, section 7 grants broad powers for up to 30 days, including:
- subsection 7(2): authority "[t]o utilize all available resources of the State government as reasonably necessary to cope with the disaster and of each political subdivision of the State"
- subsection 7(12): authority to "perform and exercise any other functions, powers, and duties as may be necessary to promote and secure the safety and protection of the civilian population"

Section 10(j) lets each political subdivision "enter into contracts and incur obligations" without the usual procedural formalities to protect health and safety during a disaster. Sections 18 and 19 authorize using existing state and local agency staff and facilities to carry out the Act.

The Department of Public Health Act (20 ILCS 2305) gives IDPH "supreme authority in matters of quarantine and isolation." It allows IDPH to adopt rules including ones regulating "[t]ransportation of the remains of deceased persons." Section 2 directs that "[a]ll local boards of health, health authorities and officers, police officers, sheriffs and all other officers and employees of the state or any locality shall enforce the rules and regulations so adopted and orders issued by the Department." The term "locality" is statutorily defined to include counties.

The Department's Control of Communicable Diseases Code (77 Ill. Adm. Code Part 690) builds on this. Coroners are listed among those required to report deaths suspected of being caused by reportable communicable diseases (section 690.200(a)(1)(N)), and among those responsible for labelling dead bodies of individuals suspected of having an infectious or communicable disease as "infection hazard" (section 690.1200(b)). These duties exist in normal times, well before any disaster declaration.

Finally, IEMA's own administrative rules (29 Ill. Adm. Code §301.240) require local emergency operations plans to address mortuary services and fatality management, including coordination with state and federal authorities for "temporary storage or permanent internment solutions."

Why the AG reached this conclusion

The AG worked from the basic principle that Illinois coroners have those powers given by the constitution, statute, ordinance, and the common law. Division 3-3 of the Counties Code is one source of statutory power. But it is not the only source. It does not contain a negative restriction blocking coroners from helping during emergencies; it just describes default investigative duties.

When the Governor declared a disaster under the Emergency Management Act, that declaration triggered a separate authority structure. Subsection 7(2) lets the Governor draw on "all available resources" of state government and political subdivisions. Coroners are county officers. Their resources, expertise, and physical infrastructure (morgue capacity, transportation logistics) became state-utilizable resources during the disaster. Subsection 7(12) provided the catch-all to "perform and exercise any other functions, powers, and duties as may be necessary to promote and secure the safety and protection of the civilian population." Section 10(j) confirmed that each political subdivision had emergency contracting authority free from ordinary procedural formalities.

The AG also pointed to plans the state had already adopted before the pandemic. The 2020 Illinois Pandemic Influenza Plan, developed by IDPH, IEMA, and partner agencies, contemplated that coroners would play a "critical role" in fatality management during an influenza pandemic, including work with temporary morgues. IEMA's own rules required local emergency operations plans to address mortuary services and fatality management. So the answer was not just "you may help" but "the state has been planning for years that you would."

The Department of Public Health Act provided an independent source of authority. IDPH's "supreme authority" over quarantine and isolation, plus its rulemaking authority over transportation of remains, plus the longstanding obligation that all officers and employees of any locality "shall enforce" IDPH's rules, made coroners part of the public health response by operation of statute. The Communicable Diseases Code already obligated coroners to report and label communicable-disease deaths even outside emergencies.

So the AG concluded that during a declared disaster, coroners were not prohibited by the Counties Code from helping with fatality management. To the contrary, they were expected to play a central role.

Common questions

Did this opinion change ordinary coroner duties under section 3-3013?

No. Section 3-3013 still governs which deaths a coroner must routinely investigate. The opinion's point was that those routine duties do not exhaustively define what a coroner can do. During a declared disaster, the Emergency Management Act and the Department of Public Health Act bring additional authorities and obligations into play.

Did the opinion say a coroner had to take any specific action during the COVID-19 disaster?

The opinion described the legal framework, not specific action. It said coroners "may be called upon to serve in roles and to provide services that extend beyond the parameters of the statutory scope of their duties under ordinary circumstances" and identified the Pandemic Influenza Plan and IEMA rules that contemplated such roles. The actual call-up and direction would come from the Governor, IEMA, and IDPH, as the Plan provided.

Did the opinion address compensation, liability, or workers' comp for coroners assisting with mass-fatality response?

No. The opinion was limited to the prohibition question (whether the Counties Code prevented coroners from helping). It did not address financing, immunity, or workers' compensation. Section 7 of the Emergency Management Act does carry separate rights to compensation or reimbursement for acts during the 30-day period.

Why did this even need an opinion? Was anyone arguing coroners couldn't help?

The Counties Code's enumerated investigative jurisdiction in section 3-3013 doesn't include "deaths from a pandemic where the decedent was under medical care." A cautious reading would say coroners had no authority to take charge of such bodies. The AG's opinion clarified that the absence of jurisdiction in division 3-3 was not the same as a prohibition, and that the disaster framework affirmatively gave coroners an emergency role.

What kind of "mass fatality" was the opinion contemplating?

The 2020 Illinois Pandemic Influenza Plan defined a "mass fatality" as "any circumstance where there are more fatalities than can be handled appropriately using the local resources regularly available." Once local capacity is exceeded, temporary morgues and other accommodations become necessary. The opinion was about who was legally permitted to help set them up and operate them.

Citations

  • 20 ILCS 3305/1 et seq. (Illinois Emergency Management Agency Act), §§2, 4, 6, 7, 10, 11, 18, 19
  • 20 ILCS 2305/1.1 et seq. (Department of Public Health Act), §2
  • 55 ILCS 5/3-3001 through 3-3045 (Counties Code, division 3-3), §3-3013
  • Ill. Const. 1970, art. VII, §4(d)
  • 77 Ill. Adm. Code Part 690 (Control of Communicable Diseases Code), §§690.200(a)(1)(N), 690.1200(b)
  • 29 Ill. Adm. Code §301.240
  • Ill. Att'y Gen. Op. No. NP-499 (July 24, 1972)
  • Public Act 101-013, effective June 12, 2019
  • Executive Proclamation No. 2020-038 (March 9, 2020)
  • Illinois Department of Public Health, Pandemic Influenza Preparedness and Response Plan, Version 5.1 (March 2020)

Source

Original opinion text

Best-effort transcription from a scanned PDF. Minor errors may remain — the linked PDF is authoritative.

OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL
STATE OF ILLINOIS

KWAME RAOUL
ATTORNEY GENERAL

April 16, 2020

FILE NO. 20-001

EMERGENCY PREPAREDNESS:
Role of County Coroners in Fatality Management Resulting From an Infectious Disease Pandemic

Ms. Alicia Tate-Nadeau
Director, Illinois Emergency Management Agency
2200 South Dirksen Parkway
Springfield, Illinois 62703

I have your letter inquiring whether, in circumstances where a disaster has been declared pursuant to section 7 of the Illinois Emergency Management Agency Act (the Emergency Management Act) (20 ILCS 3305/7 (West 2018)), coroners are prohibited under division 3-3 of the Counties Code (55 ILCS 5/3-3001 through 3-3045 (West 2018)) from taking possession of and assisting in the storage of dead bodies where the deaths were caused by the Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19). For the reasons stated below, it is my opinion that there are no provisions in division 3-3 of the Counties Code that expressly prohibit a county coroner from assisting with the collection, transportation, and storage of dead bodies during a duly declared statewide disaster resulting from the COVID-19 outbreak. To the contrary, provisions of the Emergency Management Act (20 ILCS 3305/1 et seq. (West 2018)) and the Department of Public Health Act (20 ILCS 2305/1.1 et seq. (West 2018)) specifically contemplate the critical role of county coroners with respect to fatality management during disasters involving large-scale outbreaks of contagious diseases.

BACKGROUND

COVID-19 Pandemic

A novel coronavirus, COVID-19, was first identified in China in December 2019, and has since spread throughout the world, including to the United States and the State of Illinois. See Illinois Department of Public Health Coronavirus Disease (COVID-19) website (IDPH COVID-19 website), http://dph.illinois.gov/covid19. In response to the spread of COVID-19 and to aid the nation's healthcare community in responding to the threat the disease poses, the United States Secretary of Health and Human Services declared that COVID-19 presents a public health emergency in a January 31, 2020, determination that was retroactive to January 27, 2020. On January 30, 2020, the World Health Organization's Director-General, on the advice of the Organization's International Health Regulations Emergency Committee, declared the outbreak of COVID-19 to be a Public Health Emergency of International Concern. On March 9, 2020, Illinois Governor JB Pritzker issued a disaster proclamation regarding the outbreak of COVID-19 in Illinois. Executive Proclamation No. 2020-038, issued March 9, 2020. On March 11, 2020, the World Health Organization officially classified COVID-19 as a pandemic, and on March 13, 2020, President Donald Trump declared a national emergency in this country.

Although the first confirmed COVID-19 case in Illinois was announced on January 24, 2020, in Chicago, the virus has spread quickly throughout the State. As of April 16, 2020, the Illinois Department of Public Health was reporting 25,733 total cases of COVID-19 in the State of Illinois, with cases in 90 of Illinois' 102 counties, resulting in 1,072 total deaths.

Reported illnesses related to COVID-19 have ranged from very mild (including some with no reported symptoms) to severe, including illness resulting in death. Currently, no vaccine or drug is available to prevent or treat COVID-19. Therefore, community-based interventions, such as school closures, event cancellations, social distancing, and creating employer plans to facilitate employees working remotely, have been instituted to help slow the spread of the disease.

Disaster Proclamations in Response to COVID-19

The Emergency Management Act was enacted to ensure that Illinois will be prepared to and will adequately deal with any disasters, in order to preserve the lives and property of the people of this State, and to protect the public peace, health, and safety in the event of a disaster. 20 ILCS 3305/2 (West 2018). The Act grants specific emergency management powers, and other broad emergency powers in the event of a disaster, to the Governor. 20 ILCS 3305/6, 7 (West 2018).

As noted above, on March 9, 2020, pursuant to the Emergency Management Act and in response to the COVID-19 outbreak, Governor JB Pritzker issued a proclamation finding that a disaster exists in Illinois and declaring all counties in the State of Illinois a disaster area. Executive Proclamation No. 2020-038, issued March 9, 2020. By its own terms, the proclamation expired on April 7, 2020. On April 1, 2020, Governor Pritzker issued a second disaster proclamation for the State and declared all counties in the State of Illinois as disaster areas. That proclamation is scheduled to expire on April 30, 2020.

Prospect of Mass Fatalities

Although the spread of COVID-19 in Illinois has not met original projections, there are still concerns that the pandemic may give rise to mass fatalities in one or more locations within the State. A "mass fatality" is commonly understood to refer to any circumstance where there are more fatalities than can be handled appropriately using the local resources regularly available. See Illinois Department of Public Health, Pandemic Influenza Preparedness and Response Plan, Version 5.1 (March 2020) (2020 Illinois Pandemic Influenza Plan), Support Annex 6.0, at 81. Mass fatalities are extremely complex situations that no single agency or public body can handle on its own. Once local capacity to handle a mass fatality has been exceeded, temporary morgues and other accommodations may be needed in order to store and maintain the bodies of victims in a safe, professional, and respectful manner. 2020 Illinois Pandemic Influenza Plan, Support Annex 6.0, at 82-88. It is in this context that you inquire whether county coroners are prohibited by the Counties Code from taking possession of and assisting in the storage of dead bodies on an emergency basis under circumstances where the deaths were attributable to the COVID-19 virus.

ANALYSIS

Illinois coroners generally possess those powers derived from the common law, as well as those provided by the constitution, statute, or ordinance. Ill. Const. 1970, art. VII, §4(d). The statutory duties of the coroner are set out in division 3-3 of the Counties Code. In reviewing those statutes, it is clear that the principle duty of the coroner is to make an investigation into the cause of death of a person whose body is found or is lying within the coroner's county, in certain statutorily specified circumstances. 55 ILCS 5/3-3013 (West 2018), as amended by Public Act 101-013, effective June 12, 2019; Ill. Att'y Gen. Op. No. NP-499, issued July 24, 1972. Specifically, section 3-3013 of the Counties Code (55 ILCS 5/3-3013 (West 2018), as amended by Public Act 101-013, effective June 12, 2019) provides, in pertinent part:

Every coroner, whenever, as soon as he knows or is informed that the dead body of any person is found, or lying within his county, whose death is suspected of being:

(a) A sudden or violent death, whether apparently suicidal, homicidal or accidental, including but not limited to deaths apparently caused or contributed to by thermal, traumatic, chemical, electrical or radiational injury, or a complication of any of them, or by drowning or suffocation, or as a result of domestic violence as defined in the Illinois Domestic Violence Act of 1986;

(b) A death due to a sex crime;

(c) A death where the circumstances are suspicious, obscure, mysterious or otherwise unexplained or where, in the written opinion of the attending physician, the cause of death is not determined;

(d) A death where addiction to alcohol or to any drug may have been a contributory cause; or

(e) A death where the decedent was not attended by a licensed physician;

shall go to the place where the dead body is, and take charge of the same and shall make a preliminary investigation into the circumstances of the death. In the case of death without attendance by a licensed physician the body may be moved with the coroner's consent from the place of death to a mortuary in the same county. Coroners in their discretion shall notify such physician as is designated in accordance with Section 3-3014 to attempt to ascertain the cause of death, either by autopsy or otherwise. (Emphasis added.)

It is likely that many individuals whose deaths are attributable to COVID-19 will have been under the care of a licensed physician at the time of their death. Assuming none of the other elements of section 3-3013 are applicable, the statutory jurisdiction of the coroner to take charge of a dead body and make a preliminary investigation into the cause of death in that instance would not be triggered. However, nothing in the indicated provisions of the Counties Code expressly limits the ability of coroners to take action, as needed, when a statewide or local disaster or state of emergency has been formally declared. To the contrary, as officers of political subdivisions of the State, the resources and expertise of coroners may be called upon pursuant to applicable provisions of the Emergency Management Act and the Department of Public Health Act to facilitate fatality management.

Emergency Management Act

As noted above, the Emergency Management Act provides the Governor with broad authority to utilize the resources of the State and its political subdivisions, including counties (20 ILCS 3305/4 (West 2018)), in the event of a disaster. Section 7 of the Emergency Management Act (20 ILCS 3305/7 (West 2018)) addresses the Governor's emergency powers and provides, in pertinent part:

In the event of a disaster, as defined in Section 4, the Governor may, by proclamation declare that a disaster exists. Upon such proclamation, the Governor shall have and may exercise for a period not to exceed 30 days the following emergency powers; provided, however, that the lapse of the emergency powers shall not, as regards any act or acts occurring or committed within the 30-day period, deprive any person, firm, corporation, political subdivision, or body politic of any right or rights to compensation or reimbursement which he, she, it, or they may have under the provisions of this Act:


(2) To utilize all available resources of the State government as reasonably necessary to cope with the disaster and of each political subdivision of the State.


(12) Control, restrict, and regulate by rationing, freezing, use of quotas, prohibitions on shipments, price fixing, allocation or other means, the use, sale or distribution of food, feed, fuel, clothing and other commodities, materials, goods, or services; and perform and exercise any other functions, powers, and duties as may be necessary to promote and secure the safety and protection of the civilian population. (Emphasis added.)

Section 4 of the Emergency Management Act (20 ILCS 3305/4 (West 2018)) defines a "disaster" to include "an occurrence or threat of widespread or severe damage, injury or loss of life, or property resulting from any natural * * * cause, including but not limited to * * * epidemic, [or] public health emergencies[.]" The Act further defines the phrase "public health emergency" as "an occurrence or imminent threat of an illness or health condition that[,] [among other things,] is believed to be caused by * * * the appearance of a novel * * * infectious agent * * *[,] and [it] poses a high probability of * * * a large number of deaths in the affected population[,] * * * or widespread exposure to an infectious * * * agent that poses a significant risk of substantial future harm to a large number of people in the affected population." 20 ILCS 3305/4 (West 2018). It is undisputed that the COVID-19 outbreak constitutes a public health emergency under the Emergency Management Act.

It is well established that, where statutory language is clear and unambiguous, it must be given effect as written. Klaine v. Southern Illinois Hospital Services, 2016 IL 118217, ¶14, 47 N.E.3d 966, 970 (2016); People ex rel. Illinois Department of Corrections v. Hawkins, 2011 IL 110792, ¶23, 952 N.E.2d 624, 631 (2011). Under the plain and unambiguous language of subsection 7(2) of the Emergency Management Act (20 ILCS 3305/7(2) (West 2018)), the Governor, having proclaimed that a disaster exists, may "utilize all available resources of the State government as reasonably necessary to cope with the disaster and of each political subdivision of the State[,]" which would include counties and their resources (see 20 ILCS 3305/4 (West 2018)). The Governor is further authorized by subsection 7(12) of the Emergency Management Act (20 ILCS 3305/7(12) (West 2018)) to "perform and exercise any other functions, powers, and duties as may be necessary to promote and secure the safety and protection of the civilian population."

In this regard, subsection 18(b) of the Emergency Management Act (20 ILCS 3305/18(b) (West 2018)) provides that "[e]very emergency services and disaster agency established pursuant to this Act and the coordinators thereof shall execute and enforce the orders, rules and regulations as may be made by the Governor under authority of this Act," while section 19 of the Emergency Management Act (20 ILCS 3305/19 (West 2018)) authorizes the Governor, the Director of the Illinois Emergency Management Agency, and the political subdivisions of the State to utilize the services, equipment, supplies, and facilities of existing departments, offices, and agencies of the State and political subdivisions of the State to the maximum extent practicable when carrying out the provisions of the Emergency Management Act. Section 19 also directs the officers and personnel of all such departments, offices, and agencies, "upon request, to cooperate with and extend such services and facilities to the Governor, the Director [of the Emergency Management Agency,] and the emergency services and disaster agencies."

In addition to the authority of the Governor to direct government resources, at every level, during a declared disaster, the Emergency Management Act also addresses the critical role of political subdivisions, including counties and their officers, once a disaster has been declared. Section 10 of the Emergency Management Act (20 ILCS 3305/10 (West 2018)) provides, in pertinent part:

(a) Each political subdivision within this State shall be within the jurisdiction of and served by the Illinois Emergency Management Agency and by an emergency services and disaster agency responsible for emergency management programs, * * *.


(j) In carrying out the provisions of this Act, each political subdivision may enter into contracts and incur obligations necessary to place it in a position effectively to combat the disasters as are described in Section 4, to protect the health and safety of persons, to protect property, and to provide emergency assistance to victims of those disasters. If a disaster occurs, each political subdivision may exercise the powers vested under this Section in the light of the exigencies of the disaster and, excepting mandatory constitutional requirements, without regard to the procedures and formalities normally prescribed by law pertaining to the performance of public work, entering into contracts, the incurring of obligations, the employment of temporary workers, the rental of equipment, the purchase of supplies and materials, and the appropriation, expenditure, and disposition of public funds and property. (Emphasis added.)

These provisions of the Emergency Management Act clearly and unequivocally evidence the need for the State, and all political subdivisions thereof, to possess the flexibility to respond to emergency situations, such as the COVID-19 pandemic, in a manner that ensures maximum protection for the health and welfare of citizens of Illinois. Under such circumstances, political subdivisions and their respective officers, including county coroners, may be called upon to serve in roles and to provide services that extend beyond the parameters of the statutory scope of their duties under ordinary circumstances.

Department of Public Health Act

In addition to the Illinois Emergency Management Agency, the Department of Public Health (the Department) also possesses considerable statutory and regulatory authority with respect to the management and control of infectious disease within the State. Section 2 of the Department of Public Health Act (20 ILCS 2305/2 (West 2018)) provides that the Department is charged with supervising "the interests of the health and lives of the people of the State[,]" and that it has "supreme authority in matters of quarantine and isolation[.]" In addition, the Department may "adopt, promulgate, repeal and amend rules and regulations and make such sanitary investigations and inspections as it may from time to time deem necessary for the preservation and improvement of the public health, consistent with law regulating[,] [among other things,] * * * [t]ransportation of the remains of deceased persons." Section 2 also provides that "[a]ll local boards of health, health authorities and officers, police officers, sheriffs and all other officers and employees of the state or any locality shall enforce the rules and regulations so adopted and orders issued by the Department pursuant to this Section." Section 2 further provides, in pertinent part:

The Department of Public Health shall investigate the causes of dangerously contagious or infectious diseases, especially when existing in epidemic form, and take means to restrict and suppress the same, and whenever such disease becomes, or threatens to become epidemic, in any locality and the local board of health or local authorities neglect or refuse to enforce efficient measures for its restriction or suppression or to act with sufficient promptness or efficiency, or whenever the local board of health or local authorities neglect or refuse to promptly enforce efficient measures for the restriction or suppression of dangerously contagious or infectious diseases, the Department * * * may enforce such measures as it deems necessary to protect the public health, and all necessary expenses so incurred shall be paid by the locality for which services are rendered.

The Control of Communicable Diseases Code (77 Ill. Adm. Code Part 690 (2020), last amended at 43 Ill. Reg. 2386, effective February 8, 2019), which are administrative rules adopted by the Department pursuant to its statutory authority under the Department of Public Health Act, highlight the longstanding role of the coroner with respect to management of infectious disease within the State, even under non-disaster or non-emergency circumstances. See 77 Ill. Adm. Code §690.200(a)(1)(N) (2020), last amended at 43 Ill. Reg. 2386, effective February 8, 2019 (coroners among those required to report deaths suspected to be caused by a reportable communicable disease); 77 Ill. Adm. Code §690.1200(b) (2020), last amended at 18 Ill. Reg. 10158, effective July 15, 1994 (coroners among those responsible for labelling dead bodies of individuals suspected of having an infectious or communicable disease as "infection hazard").

Based on the above, it is clear that, in circumstances where a disaster has been declared pursuant to section 7 of the Emergency Management Act, coroners are not prohibited by the Counties Code from taking possession of and assisting in the storage of dead bodies where the deaths were caused by the COVID-19 virus. To the contrary, under such circumstances, coroners will play a critical role in fatality management, as directed by the Illinois Emergency Management Agency, under the auspices of the Office of the Governor, as well as the Department of Public Health.

CONCLUSION

For the reasons stated above, it is my opinion that, where a disaster has been declared pursuant to section 7 of the Illinois Emergency Management Agency Act, coroners are not prohibited by division 3-3 of the Counties Code from taking possession of and assisting in the storage of dead bodies where the deaths were caused by the COVID-19 virus. Rather, coroners will play a critical role in fatality management, as directed by the Illinois Emergency Management Agency, under the auspices of the Office of the Governor, as well as the Department of Public Health, in coordination with the appropriate local officials.

Very truly yours,

KWAME RAOUL
ATTORNEY GENERAL