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My Unique Education at Chicago’s Cook County Morgue

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The mood was festive as the public viewed the remains of John Dillinger in 1934 
Chicago, IL—In the early 1970’s I was assigned to remove murder suspects from the Cook County Jail and take them to the Cook County Morgue.   The old Morgue seen above in rare photos was located at Polk and Woods Streets on Chicago’s West side.  It was near the Cook County Hospital.  It has since been torn down. 
From 1960 until 1976 the elected Cook County Coroner was the late Andrew J. Toman, MD.  Various forensic pathologists appointed by the Cook County Board have since replaced Dr. Toman.  It is now called the Office of The Cook County Medical Examiner.

In those days Coroner’s Inquests into the manner of death were held.   They were presided over by a Cook County Deputy Coroner and a jury of six men hearing the testimony and reviewing the complicated evidence determined if the death was a crime or from some other means. 

Homicide detectives would provide testimony and the pathology and toxicology reports were also entered into evidence.  Anyone in police custody charged in connection with the death was asked to testify subject to standard Miranda warnings.

Often I’d eat my carry out lunch inside of the jury deliberation room while the elderly were deliberating.  The jury members played cards and talked sports rather than the business at hand.  They would soon signal signal that a verdict was reached and the foreman would dutifully recite it on the record.  The reality was a secret hand signal from the Deputy Coroner to the jury foreman determined just what the verdict would be!  It was anything but a dramatic like the one in, Twelve Angry Men.

The jury foreman recited the Murder verdicts this way: “We the jury, sworn on the remains of (name of the victim) find this occurrence to have been a murder and we recommend that the defendant now in police custody be held on a charge of murder until released by due process of law”.

Coroner’s Inquest verdicts were never binding upon prosecutors and they were considered duplicative and unnecessary.  Prosecutors demanded to have the last word on prosecutions and too often the Coroner’s jury disagreed with them.  The new laws of the Medical examiner eliminated the proceedings altogether, at least in Cook County. 

In the case of police justified killings the cops were required to testify despite their right to claim protection against self-incrimination. 

Laws and attitudes have changed over the years along with the press and public’s right to know exactly what was happening behind the walls of this local government facility.

In 1934 when FBI agents and East Chicago, Indiana cops at Chicago’s Biograph Theater on North Lincoln Avenue gunned down the infamous fugitive gangster, John Dillinger.   The press and the public had the absolute right to view Dillinger’s remains and he was put on display for the morbidly curious.  That could not happen today under present laws.

Prior to late 1976, the office of Cook County Coroner existed and operated under laws that have changed considerably. 

As for my exposure to forensic pathology I sat through hundreds of inquests and during breaks I’d go downstairs and watch the autopsies. I can say that I’ve closely watched between 700 and 800 of them. 

I’ve seen every conceivable kind of death up close and personal.  Unfortunately they included murdered cops, a very pretty friend and neighbor who was stabbed to death and two friends killed in car accidents. 

That along with my experience as an Army medical corpsman this was quite an education.   As a police or private investigator understanding related medical documents and testimony is often very important.

The various changes of the law involving the Coroner/Medical Examiner was the direct result of a Federal Grand Jury probe of the infamous December, 1969 Black Panther Party Raid that resulted in the justifiable deaths of Fred Hampton and Mark Clark.  

During the many years of litigation that followed the raid practices of the Coroner were criticized and some politicians demanded reforms. That’s what led to the changes. 

The autopsy protocol I became familiar with was long before the fear of HIV and AIDS.  Rubber gloves were used for the most part, but not mandated.  Masks and eye protection was rarely used unless the remains were really over-ripe. 

The bodies were kept on somewhat clean stainless steel gurneys and the remains were covered with plain brown butcher paper.  Standard autopsy tables with running water were used and above with the lights were microphones for dictation by the attending pathologists.  

The head physician was an elderly man, Jerry J. Kerns, MD who sat at a dest with his back to the autopsy tables.  The body was measured and weighed with a floor scale.  The weight of the gurney was then deducted from the total weight. 

The autopsy assistants or dieners (their proper title) were all exclusively African-American males.  They were political patronage workers with limited educations including some functional illiterates.  Let me defend these men because they all knew human anatomy really well.  They taught me a lot! 


The dieners could trace bullet wound tracks better than the pathologists and could easily recognize an internal organ that was in anyway abnormal due to size, shape or color.  They could tell an adrenal gland from a pituitary gland in a split second. 
The pathologist would look at the remains and dictate what he saw and return to his desk.  The dieners would usually open the body, and rib cage.  Ordinary tree pruning shears are the choice tool for quickly and cleanly cutting the rib bones away from the breastbone. 

They then would cut the scalp pulling the forward and anterior flaps down exposing the skull.  They would use a Stryker cast saw to cut the top of the skull so the brain could be easily removed.  It was at that point the pathologist would take a look and either take over or simply tell the dieners what was needed.

The internal organs were all removed one at a time, weighed and sectioned off and preserved in containers for further examination.  What was left including the brain was placed in a plastic or rubber trash container lined with a plastic bag.  

When the autopsy was concluded the dieners would replace the brain with a large wad of cotton and the scull cap was replaced.  The scalp was pulled back over and stitched with a large upholstery needle with butcher string.  

That large plastic bag filled with the viscera was stuffed into the open body cavity.  The ribcage was closed and the breastbone laid on top were it belongs.  The Y shaped body cavity incision was closed using the same needle and string as the scalp. 

The pathologist would dictate the rest of the report with incredible speed.  At that point they’d rinse off the table and various tools.  Odors were kept under control with lots of liquid Pine-Sol detergent. 

During obvious homicide related autopsies it was routine for the homicide detectives to watch and actually make the recovery of bullets and other similar projectiles.  They’d transport that evidence to the ballistics examiners at the various crime labs.   They also take pictures of the remains and various wounds. 

Today the dieners are now formally educated technicians, the Butcher paper has been replaced with heavy duty plastic and everyone wears protective gowns and faceguards.  The physician is present throughout the examination. 

 

I wish to thank the late, Jerry J. Kerns, MD and Deputy Coroner, Anthony J. Scriaffa along with some very capable dieners for their assistance in this important part of my education.  I also must thank my wagon partners, most notably the late, L.C. Johnsonfor guarding the prisoners while I was learning one floor below.  I have no university credit hours or diploma to show for this, but what an amazing education.

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Source: http://www.crimefilenews.com/2014/03/my-unique-education-at-chicagos-cook.html



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