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Terence Keel, "The Coroner’s Silence: Death Records and the Hidden Victims of Police Violence" (Beacon Press, 2025)

Jan 23, 2026
Terence Keel, a UCLA professor and author of The Coroner’s Silence, dives into the hidden stories of police violence victims. He reveals how coroners often obscure the truth behind in-custody deaths with misleading autopsy language, prioritizing police narratives over accountability. Keel discusses systemic failures in forensic medicine and highlights alarming statistics on deaths resulting from police custody. With a call for community engagement and better transparency, he advocates for a much-needed shift in how we document these tragic incidents.
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INSIGHT

Autopsies Can Obscure Police Responsibility

  • Autopsy reports often minimize police agency and elevate victims' preexisting conditions to deflect responsibility.
  • Terence Keel argues this pattern transforms death records into protections for law enforcement rather than public accountability.
INSIGHT

Most States Don’t Require In-Custody Autopsies

  • Only six states mandate autopsies for in-custody deaths, leaving most decisions to local officials.
  • Keel calls this gap a crisis of democracy because it prevents consistent truth-telling about deaths in custody.
INSIGHT

Official Counts Underrepresent In-Custody Deaths

  • Official counts understate deaths because police self-reporting creates conflicts of interest.
  • Keel estimates more people die daily in custody than official lists reveal, leaving many names permanently lost.
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