
New Books in History Terence Keel, "The Coroner’s Silence: Death Records and the Hidden Victims of Police Violence" (Beacon Press, 2025)
Jan 23, 2026
Terence Keel, a professor at UCLA and author of The Coroner’s Silence, delves into hidden victims of police violence. He discusses how autopsy reports often shield police from accountability and obscure the reality of in-custody deaths. Keel shares his emotional journey while researching overlooked deaths, emphasizing the systemic failures of forensic medicine. With alarming statistics and a critical analysis of death records, he calls for a fundamental rethinking of how we seek justice for marginalized lives lost.
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Records That Rewrite Responsibility
- Autopsy records often obscure police agency by emphasizing victims' health and behavior.
- Terence Keel shows this framing protects law enforcement and erases accountability.
Few Mandatory Autopsies Nationwide
- Only six states mandate autopsies for in-custody deaths, creating huge gaps.
- Keel argues this legal patchwork prevents transparent, comparable accounting across the U.S.
Counting Depends On Police Cooperation
- Official counts underreport deaths because police self-report names and circumstances.
- Keel shows this creates an unavoidable conflict of interest in national death tallies.

