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Current as of January 01, 2025 | Updated by Findlaw Staff
§ 9. (a) Every county medical examiner and coroner shall, in every death investigation where the identity of a dead body cannot be determined by visual means, fingerprints, or other identifying data, have a qualified dentist, as determined by the county medical examiner or coroner, conduct a dental examination of the dead body. If the county medical examiner or coroner, with the aid of the dental examination and other identifiers, is still unable to establish the identity of the dead body, the medical examiner or coroner shall forthwith submit the dental records to the Illinois State Police.
(b) If a person reported missing has not been found within 30 days, the law enforcement agency to whom the person was reported missing shall, within the next 5 days, make all necessary efforts to locate and request from the family or next of kin of the missing person written consent to contact and receive from the dentist of the missing person that person's dental records and shall forthwith make every reasonable effort to acquire such records. Within 5 days of the receipt of the missing person's dental records, the law enforcement agency shall submit such records to the Illinois State Police.
(c) The Illinois State Police shall be the State central repository for all dental records submitted pursuant to this Section. The Illinois State Police may promulgate rules for the form and manner of submission of dental records, reporting of the location or identification of persons for whom dental records have been submitted and other procedures for program operations.
(d) When a person who has been reported missing is located and that person's dental records have been submitted to the Illinois State Police, the law enforcement agency which submitted that person's dental records to the Illinois State Police shall report that fact to the Illinois State Police and the Illinois State Police shall expunge the dental records of that person from the Illinois State Police's file. The Illinois State Police shall also expunge from its files the dental records of those dead and missing persons who are positively identified as a result of comparisons made with its files, the files maintained by other states, territories, insular possessions of the United States, or the United States.
Cite this article: FindLaw.com - Illinois Statutes Chapter 20. Executive Branch § 2630/9. Dental examinations and records - last updated January 01, 2025 | https://codes.findlaw.com/il/chapter-20-executive-branch/il-st-sect-20-2630-9/
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