An inquest is an investigation into the cause and circumstances of a death. Laws vary from state to state and the circumstances under which an inquest may be required are usually specified in a state’s statutes.
For example, if a person dies in a county with a medical examiner, the medical examiner (or authorized deputy) may be required to conduct an inquest under the these and other circumstances:
• when a person dies within 24 hours after being admitted to a hospital or institution, or dies in prison or jail;
• when a person is killed, or dies from an unnatural cause of death (unless executed by the state for a crime), or dies without one or more good witnesses;
• when the body or a body part of a person is found, and the cause or circumstances of death are unknown;
• when the circumstances of the death of any person lead to suspicion the person died by unlawful means;
• when any person commits suicide, or the circumstances of the person's death lead to suspicion the person committed suicide;
• when a person dies without having been attended by a duly licensed and practicing physician, and the local health officer or registrar required to report the cause of death does not know the cause of death;
• when the person is a child and the death is required to be reported by law; and
• when a person dies who has been attended immediately preceding death by a duly licensed and practicing physician or physicians, and such physician or physicians are not certain as to the cause of death and are unable to certify with certainty the cause of death.
In Mississippi, an inquest is a formal investigation into the cause and circumstances of a death, particularly when the death is sudden, unexpected, or suspicious. The state statutes provide guidance on when an inquest is necessary. According to Mississippi Code Section 41-61-65, an inquest is generally required in cases such as: deaths occurring within 24 hours of admission to a hospital or institution, deaths in prison or jail, deaths resulting from unnatural causes unless executed by the state, deaths without good witnesses, discovery of a body or body parts with unknown cause or circumstances of death, deaths under suspicious circumstances suggesting unlawful means, suspected suicides, deaths without medical attendance where the cause is unknown, child deaths that are legally mandated to be reported, and when a physician attending the deceased prior to death is uncertain about the cause of death. In these situations, the county medical examiner or a deputy medical examiner is typically responsible for conducting the inquest to determine the cause of death.