New Books in Human Rights

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 director of the Biocritical Studies Lab, dives deep into the dark realities of police-related deaths in his book, examining the role of coroners in obscuring these tragedies. He discusses how autopsy reports often downplay police involvement and reveals shocking statistics on in-custody deaths, including 32,104 victims from 2000 to 2020. Keel highlights systemic failures in the investigation process while calling for a fundamental rethinking of accountability, urging action from listeners to demand reform.
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INSIGHT

Autopsies That Obscure Police Role

  • Autopsy reports often minimize police agency and emphasize victims' preexisting conditions.
  • Terrence Keel found records crafted to provide cover for law enforcement rather than public transparency.
INSIGHT

Mandatory Autopsies Exist In Few States

  • Only six U.S. states mandate autopsies for deaths in police custody.
  • Keel argues this legal gap prevents democratic oversight and consistent accountability.
INSIGHT

Counting Relies On Police Self-Reporting

  • Official tallies undercount deaths because police self-report names and circumstances.
  • Keel shows dependence on police disclosure creates a structural conflict of interest for counting deaths.
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