Pending
COMMITTEE AMENDMENT NO 1 PROPOSED TO
Senate Bill No. 2268
BY: Committee
Amend by striking all after the enacting clause and inserting in lieu thereof the following:
SECTION 1. (1) As used in this section, the following words shall have the meanings herein ascribed unless the context clearly requires otherwise:
(a) "Forensic genetic genealogy testing" means the combination of laboratory testing, genetic genealogy, and law enforcement investigative techniques to develop investigate leads as to the identify of unidentified human remains. "Forensic genetic genealogy testing" includes developing genealogy DNA profiles consisting of one hundred thousand (100,000) or more markers that are compatible with multiple genealogy databases consented for law enforcement use.
(b) "Missing person" means a person reported to a law enforcement agency as missing and unaccounted for from expected and normal activities. "Missing person" includes, but is not limited to, children under eighteen (18) years of age and those missing persons described in Sections 43-15-401 and 45-41-1.
(c) "Unidentified person" means a person living or deceased who is unidentified after all available methods used to identify a person have been exhausted, including a decedent released to the State Medical Examiner in which the positive identity of the decedent cannot be established by the State Medical Examiner. "Unidentified person" includes unidentified human remains as defined in 41-61-53(l).
(2) (a) When a credible report of a missing person or unidentified person is received, a law enforcement agency shall initiate the following procedures upon receipt of the report, if possible, but no later than ten (10) days of receiving the missing person or unidentified person report:
(i) Submit the missing person or unidentified person case to the National Missing and Unidentified Persons System and to any database of missing persons or unidentified persons currently required by the law enforcement agency, providing all appropriate data. The requirements of this subparagraph (i) may be fulfilled by a law enforcement agency submitting the report to the National Crime Information Center (NCIC). The State Medical Examiner shall transfer the submitted data into the National Missing and Unidentified Persons System on behalf of the law enforcement agency;
(ii) Locate and obtain biometric records, including medical and dental records, medical and dental X-rays, or other medical imaging, and enter those records into the National Missing and Unidentified Persons System. Records described under this subparagraph (ii) are considered confidential and shall not be released to the public;
(iii) Utilize a CODIS approved buccal swab collection kit or similar and obtain voluntary DNA samples from appropriate family members to submit to the State Medical Examiner who shall coordinate submission of samples to a CODIS/NDIS participating laboratory for DNA testing and development of a full genetic profile, including, but not limited to, testing of mitochondrial DNA, short tandem repeats on the Y-chromosome, and nuclear analyses, to be documented in the National Missing and Unidentified Persons System, missing persons or unidentified persons file, and submitted to the Federal Bureau of Investigation’s National DNA Index System using the Combined DNA Index System. If necessary, the law enforcement agency may request assistance in obtaining family reference DNA samples; and
(iv) Attempt to locate any fingerprints from available resources and submit the fingerprints to the National Missing and Unidentified Persons System.
(b) At the request of a law enforcement agency, any of the requirements of paragraph (a) of this subsection may be fulfilled by the State Medical Examiner of behalf of the law enforcement agency.
(3) A law enforcement agency or the State Medical Examiner shall input the following data, if available for an unidentified person, into the National Missing and Unidentified Persons System:
(a) Copies of fingerprints on standardized fingerprint cards measuring eight inches by eight inches (8″ x 8″) or the equivalent digital image, including partial prints of any fingers;
(b) Forensic dental report or radiology imaging;
(c) Detailed personal descriptions;
(d) Deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) information;
(e) Radiology imaging and medical data; and
(f) All other identifying data, including date and place of death.
(4) (a) A law enforcement agency shall not require a delay before accepting or investigating a report of a missing person when reliable information has been provided to the law enforcement agency that the person is missing.
(b) A law enforcement agency shall not mandate the appearance of a next of kin before initiating a missing persons investigation.
(5) (a) If a law enforcement agency receives a report of a missing person from another law enforcement agency or from a medical examiner, the law enforcement agency shall maintain a record of the case file.
(b) The information contained in a report of a missing person from another law enforcement agency or from a medical examiner shall be made available to appropriate law enforcement agencies and medical examiners attempting to identify unidentified persons.
(6) (a) A law enforcement agency shall not establish or maintain a policy that requires the observance of a waiting period before accepting and investigating a report of a missing child.
(b) Notwithstanding the timeframe provided in subsection (2) of this section, upon receipt of a report of a missing child, a law enforcement agency shall enter the report into the National Missing and Unidentified Persons System without delay.
(7) When a person previously reported missing has been found or when an unidentified person has been identified, the responsible law enforcement agency or the Department of Public Safety shall promptly inform the State Medical Examiner who shall report to the National Missing and Unidentified Persons System within five (5) days of the person being found.
(8) This section does not prohibit an authorized law enforcement agency or medical examiner from maintaining case files related to missing persons or unidentified bodies.
(9) Notwithstanding the timeframe provided in subsection (2)(a) of this section, after the State Medical Examiner has had possession of unidentified human remains for forty-five (45) days, the State Medical Examiner shall test the DNA using forensic genetic genealogy testing.
(10) The duties required under this section are in addition to any duties and procedures required of a law enforcement agency by Sections 43-15-401 and 45-41-1.
SECTION 2. Section 41-61-53, Mississippi Code of 1972, is amended as follows:
41-61-53. For the purposes of Sections 41-61-51 through 41-61-79, the following definitions shall apply:
(a) "Certification of death" means signing the death certificate.
(b) "Coroner" means the elected county official provided for in Sections 19-21-101 through 19-21-107.
(c) "County medical examiner investigator" means a nonphysician coroner or deputy coroner trained to investigate and certify deaths affecting the public interest.
(d) "County medical examiner" means a licensed physician who is a coroner or deputy coroner trained to investigate and certify deaths affecting the public interest.
(e) "Death affecting the public interest" means any death of a human being where the circumstances are sudden, unexpected, violent, suspicious or unattended.
(f) "Medical examiner" means the medical examiner system which is composed of the State Medical Examiner, county medical examiners and county medical examiner investigators collectively, and is a jurisdictional identifier, not a title, unless the context clearly requires otherwise.
(g) "Medical examiner investigator" means a nonphysician appointed, trained and supervised by the State Medical Examiner to investigate and assist with the certification of deaths affecting the public interest.
(h) "Pronouncement of death" means the statement of opinion that life has ceased for an individual.
(i) "State Medical Examiner" means the person appointed by the Commissioner of Public Safety pursuant to Section 41-61-55 to investigate and certify deaths that affect the public interest.
(j) "Autopsy" means a postmortem examination.
(k) "Postmortem examination" means an examination of a dead human body that may include the least invasive to most invasive methods based on the expertise and judgment of the pathologist handling the case.
(l) "Unclaimed human remains" means all coroner cases with a confirmed identification that have not been claimed by family or where no family has been located in order to claim the remains.
(m) "Unidentified human remains" means deceased human remains, skeletonized or with tissue, which require the application of scientific identification methods to determine positive identity, as established by the State Medical Examiner. "Unidentified human remains" includes all deceased human remains without a positive identity, including those deceased human remains:
(i) With or without a presumptive identification; or
(ii) Which are visually unrecognizable due to traumatic injury or decomposition.
"Unidentified human remains" do not include deceased human remains which have been determined to be solely archaeological in origin through consultation between the State Medical Examiner and the Mississippi Department of Archives and History.
SECTION 3. Section 41-61-59, Mississippi Code of 1972, is amended as follows:
41-61-59. (1) A person's death
that affects the public interest as specified in subsection (2) of this section
shall be promptly reported to the medical examiner by the physician in attendance,
any hospital employee, any law enforcement officer having knowledge of the death,
the embalmer or other funeral home employee, any emergency medical technician, any
relative or any other person present. The appropriate medical examiner shall notify
the municipal or state law enforcement agency or sheriff and take charge of the
body. When the medical examiner has received notification under Section * * *
41-39-143 that the deceased is medically suitable to be an organ and/or tissue
donor, the medical examiner's authority over the body shall be subject to the provisions
of Section * * * 41-39-143. When
the body is unidentified human remains, the medical examiner's jurisdiction of
the body shall be subject to the provisions of Section 41-61-61, and the body
shall be submitted to the State Medical Examiner. The appropriate medical examiner
shall notify the Mississippi Bureau of Narcotics within twenty-four (24) hours of
receipt of the body in cases of death as described in subsection (2)(m) or (n) of
this section.
(2) A death affecting the public interest includes, but is not limited to, any of the following:
(a) Violent death, including homicidal, suicidal or accidental death.
(b) Death caused by thermal, chemical, electrical or radiation injury.
(c) Death caused by criminal abortion, including self-induced abortion, or abortion related to or by sexual abuse.
(d) Death related to disease thought to be virulent or contagious that may constitute a public hazard.
(e) Death that has occurred unexpectedly or from an unexplained cause.
(f) Death of a person confined in a prison, jail or correctional institution.
(g) Death of a person where a physician was not in attendance within thirty-six (36) hours preceding death, or in prediagnosed terminal or bedfast cases, within thirty (30) days preceding death.
(h) Death of a person where the body is not claimed by a relative or a friend.
(i) Death of a person where
the * * * deceased * * * human remains are unidentified human
remains.
(j) Death of a child under the age of two (2) years where death results from an unknown cause or where the circumstances surrounding the death indicate that sudden infant death syndrome may be the cause of death.
(k) Where a body is brought into this state for disposal and there is reason to believe either that the death was not investigated properly or that there is not an adequate certificate of death.
(l) Where a person is presented to a hospital emergency room unconscious and/or unresponsive, with cardiopulmonary resuscitative measures being performed, and dies within twenty-four (24) hours of admission without regaining consciousness or responsiveness, unless a physician was in attendance within thirty-six (36) hours preceding presentation to the hospital, or in cases in which the decedent had a prediagnosed terminal or bedfast condition, unless a physician was in attendance within thirty (30) days preceding presentation to the hospital.
(m) Death that is caused by drug overdose or which is believed to be caused by drug overdose.
(n) When a stillborn fetus is delivered and the cause of the demise is medically believed to be from the use by the mother of any controlled substance as defined in Section 41-29-105.
(3) The State Medical Examiner is empowered to investigate deaths, under the authority hereinafter conferred, in any and all political subdivisions of the state. The county medical examiners and county medical examiner investigators, while appointed for a specific county, may serve other counties on a regular basis with written authorization by the State Medical Examiner, or may serve other counties on an as-needed basis upon the request of the ranking officer of the investigating law enforcement agency. If a death affecting the public interest takes place in a county other than the one where injuries or other substantial causal factors leading to the death have occurred, jurisdiction for investigation of the death may be transferred, by mutual agreement of the respective medical examiners of the counties involved, to the county where the injuries or other substantial causal factors occurred, and the costs of autopsy or other studies necessary to the further investigation of the death shall be borne by the county assuming jurisdiction.
(4) (a) In criminal trials where the testimony of a current or former State Medical Examiner, Deputy State Medical Examiner, or member of the Mississippi Forensics Laboratory is needed, the use of audiovisual communications equipment to present such testimony remotely is allowed when the state has provided written notice to the defendant at least ninety (90) days prior to trial of its intent to present such remote testimony, and the defendant provides no written objection within fourteen (14) days of receiving such notice. Should the defendant object, the remote testimony shall only be permitted upon a finding by the court that the rights of the defendant to confront the witness against the defendant is not violated, that compelling circumstances exist to allow such remote testimony, and that the remote testimony can be provided with appropriate safeguards so as to assure the reliability of the testimony of the witness during the trial.
(b) All persons qualified to administer an oath in the State of Mississippi may swear in a witness remotely by audiovisual communication technology, provided they can positively identify the witness and they are able to both see and hear the witness via audiovisual communications equipment.
(5) The chief county medical examiner or chief county medical examiner investigator may receive from the county in which he serves a salary of One Thousand Two Hundred Fifty Dollars ($1,250.00) per month, in addition to the fees specified in Sections 41-61-69 and 41-61-75, provided that no county shall pay the chief county medical examiner or chief county medical examiner investigator less than Three Hundred Dollars ($300.00) per month as a salary, in addition to other compensation provided by law. In any county having one or more deputy medical examiners or deputy medical examiner investigators, each deputy may receive from the county in which he serves, in the discretion of the board of supervisors, a salary of not more than Nine Hundred Dollars ($900.00) per month, in addition to the fees specified in Sections 41-61-69 and 41-61-75; however, no county shall pay the deputy medical examiners or deputy medical examiner investigators less than Three Hundred Dollars ($300.00) per month as a salary in addition to other compensation provided by law. For this salary the chief shall assure twenty-four-hour daily and readily available death investigators for the county, and shall maintain copies of all medical examiner death investigations for the county for at least the previous five (5) years. He shall coordinate his office and duties and cooperate with the State Medical Examiner, and the State Medical Examiner shall cooperate with him.
SECTION 4. Section 41-61-61, Mississippi Code of 1972, is amended as follows:
41-61-61. (1) Upon the death of any person where that death affects the public interest, the medical examiner of the county in which the body of the deceased is found or, if death occurs in a moving conveyance, where the conveyance stops and death is pronounced, shall be notified promptly by any person having knowledge or suspicion of such a death, as provided in subsection (1) of Section 41-61-59. The medical examiner shall then notify the State Medical Examiner, in accordance with Section 41-61-63(2)(a). No person shall disturb the body at the scene of such a death until authorized by the medical examiner, unless the medical examiner is unavailable and it is determined by an appropriate law enforcement officer that the presence of the body at the scene would risk the integrity of the body or provide a hazard to the safety of others. For the limited purposes of this section, expression of an opinion that death has occurred may be made by a nurse, an emergency medical technician, or any other competent person, in the absence of a physician.
(2) The discovery of unidentified human remains or of anatomical material suspected of being part of the human body shall be promptly reported either (a) to the medical examiner of the county in which the material is found, who shall report the discovery to the State Medical Examiner, or (b) to the State Medical Examiner. The unidentified human remains or the anatomical material suspected of being part of the human body shall be submitted to the State Medical Examiner.
(3) (a) A person who willfully moves, distributes or conceals a body or body part in violation of this section is guilty of a misdemeanor, and may be punished by a fine of not more than Five Hundred Dollars ($500.00), or by imprisonment for not more than six (6) months in the county jail, or by both such fine and imprisonment.
(b) A person who willfully destroys a body, body part or unidentified human remains in violation of this section is guilty of a felony, and may be punished by a fine of not more than Five Thousand Dollars ($5,000.00), or by imprisonment for not more than two (2) years in the custody of the Department of Corrections, or by both such fine and imprisonment.
(4) Upon oral or written authorization of the medical examiner, if an autopsy is to be performed, the body shall be transported directly to an autopsy facility in a suitable secure conveyance, as determined by the State Medical Examiner, and the expenses of transportation shall be paid by the county for which the service is provided. The county may contract with individuals or make available a vehicle to the medical examiner or law enforcement personnel for transportation of bodies. If transport must be delayed for any reason, the county shall store the body in an environment conducive to maintaining preservation prior to transporting the body to the State Medical Examiner's Office for postmortem examination.
(5) The county medical examiner investigator shall enter into the National Missing and Unidentified Persons System all unclaimed human remains cases as defined in 41-61-53(l) within five (5) days following the identification of the unclaimed human remains but in no case longer than fifteen (15) days from the date of death of the individual. The State Medical Examiner is authorized to enter these cases into the National Missing and Unidentified Persons System on behalf of the county medical examiner investigator.
SECTION 5. Section 41-39-5, Mississippi Code of 1972, is amended as follows:
41-39-5. (1) Any physician, hospital, funeral director, embalmer, county medical examiner or other person acquiring possession of unidentified human remains as defined in 41-61-53(m), or portion thereof, shall:
(a) Immediately submit the unidentified human remains to the State Medical Examiner pursuant to Sections 41-61-59 and 41-61-61; and
(b) Not subject the unidentified human remains to cremation, embalming or other destructive treatment.
(2) Any physician,
hospital, funeral director, embalmer * * * or other person acquiring possession
of a dead human body or portion thereof which is not claimed for burial or
cremation within forty-eight (48) hours of its acquisition and is not unidentified
human remains shall give written notice thereof to the board of supervisors,
or a member thereof, of the county in which the dead body or portion thereof is
located, furnishing such identification of the decedent as may be available.
The board of supervisors or the coroner shall make reasonable efforts to notify
members of the decedent's family or other known interested persons, and, if the
dead body or portion thereof shall not be claimed for burial or cremation by
any interested person within five (5) days of the aforementioned written notice,
the board of supervisors or coroner shall, as soon as it may think appropriate,
authorize and direct the burial or cremation and burial of the residue of such
dead body or portion thereof. In its discretion and where otherwise permitted
to do so by law, the board of supervisors may direct the disposition of the
dead body or portion thereof as provided by Section 41-39-7. The reasonable
expense of such burial or cremation and burial of the residue of a dead body
shall be borne by the estate of the decedent or of any person liable at law for
the necessities of the decedent during his lifetime or, if they are unable to
pay the same, by the county of residence or settlement of the decedent, if
known, and, if not known, by the county in which the dead body or portion
thereof is located.
(3) If the person having possession of such dead human body or portion thereof shall have no available means of preserving the same and shall so notify the board of supervisors, or a member thereof, of the county in which the dead body or portion thereof is located, it shall be the duty of the board of supervisors to make arrangements for the preservation of the same until burial or cremation and burial of the residue of the dead body as hereinabove provided, and the expense of such preservation shall be borne as hereinabove provided with respect to the expense of burial or cremation.
(4) No county funds may be expended in excess of the amount budgeted for the purposes of this section without the prior approval of the board of supervisors of the county.
SECTION 6. Section 45-6-7, Mississippi Code of 1972, is amended as follows:
45-6-7. In addition to the powers conferred upon the board elsewhere in this chapter, the board shall have power to:
(a) Promulgate rules and regulations for the administration of this chapter, including the authority to require the submission of reports and information by law enforcement agencies of the state and its political subdivisions.
(b) Establish minimum educational and training standards for admission to employment or appointment as a law enforcement officer or a part-time law enforcement officer: (i) in a permanent position; and (ii) in a probationary status. The minimum educational and training standards for any law enforcement officer assigned to field or investigative duties shall include at least two (2) hours of training related to handling complaints of human trafficking and commercial sexual exploitation of children as defined in Section 43-21-105, communicating with such victims, and requiring the officer to contact the Department of Child Protection Services when human trafficking or commercial sexual exploitation is suspected and at least two (2) hours of training related to the investigation of unidentified and missing persons.
(c) Certify persons as being qualified under the provisions of this chapter to be law enforcement officers or part-time law enforcement officers.
(d) Revoke certification for cause and in the manner provided in this chapter. The board is authorized to subpoena documents regarding revocations. The board shall maintain a current list of all persons certified under this chapter who have been placed on probation, suspended, subjected to revocation of certification, or any combination of these.
(e) Establish minimum curriculum requirements for basic and advanced courses and programs for schools operated by or for the state or any political subdivision thereof for the specific purpose of training police and other law enforcement officers, both full- and part-time, which shall include a minimum of two (2) hours of training in a course or courses related to the identification of and support for victims of human trafficking and commercial sexual exploitation.
(f) Consult and cooperate with counties, municipalities, state agencies, other governmental agencies, and with universities, colleges, community and junior colleges and other institutions concerning the development of training schools, programs or courses of instruction for personnel defined in this chapter.
(g) Make recommendations concerning any matter within its purview pursuant to this chapter.
(h) Make such inspection and evaluation as may be necessary to determine if governmental units are complying with the provisions of this chapter.
(i) Approve law enforcement officer training schools for operation by or for the state or any political subdivision thereof for the specific purpose of training personnel defined in this chapter.
(j) Upon the request of agencies employing personnel defined in this chapter, conduct surveys or aid municipalities and counties to conduct surveys through qualified public or private agencies and assist in the implementation of any recommendations resulting from such surveys.
(k) Upon request of agencies within the purview of this chapter, conduct general and specific management surveys and studies of the operations of the requesting agencies at no cost to those agencies. The role of the board under this subsection shall be that of management consultant.
(l) Adopt and amend regulations consistent with law, for its internal management and control of board programs.
(m) Enter into contracts or do such things as may be necessary and incidental to the administration of this chapter.
(n) Establish jointly with the State Board of Education the minimum level of basic law enforcement training required of persons employed by school districts as school security guards, or school resource officers or in other positions that have the powers of a peace officer.
SECTION 7. (1) As used in this section, the following words and phrases have the meanings ascribed in this subsection unless the context clearly requires otherwise:
(a) "Organ procurement organization PEER review committee," "PEER review committee" or "committee" means a committee of representatives of a not-for-profit organization responsible for recovering organs from donors for transplantation, which organization's federally designated donation service area includes all or a portion of the State of Mississippi. An "organ procurement organization PEER review committee" may be comprised solely of representatives of a state not-for-profit organization or any national not-for-profit entity with which the federal government contracts to serve as the nation's transplant system, or a combination of representatives from both the state organization and entity servicing as the nation's transplant system.
(b) "Proceedings" means all reviews, meetings, conversations and communications of an organ procurement organization PEER review committee.
(c) "Records" means all committee minutes, transcripts, applications, correspondence, incident reports and other documents created, received or reviewed by or for an organ procurement organization PEER review committee.
(2) A not-for-profit organization responsible for recovering organs from donors for transplantation in all or a portion of the state may establish an organ procurement organization PEER review committee. The functions of an organ procurement organization PEER review committee include, but are not limited to: evaluating and improving the quality of services rendered by the state organization; evaluating the competence or practice of employees and staff of the state organization; and determining if services rendered by the organization were professionally performed in compliance with the applicable standard of care.
(3) A person or institution furnishing information, data, reports or records to a PEER review committee may not be held liable for damages to another person by reason of furnishing the information. A member of a PEER review committee may not be held liable for damages to a person for an action taken or recommendation made within the scope of the functions of the committee if the committee or committee member acted without malice and in the reasonable belief that the action or recommendation was warranted by the facts known to the individual at the time of the action or recommendation.
(4) The identity of a person who is an organ donor or organ recipient is confidential and may not be revealed by a PEER review committee or member of the committee.
(5) Notwithstanding any conflicting statute, court rule or other law, in order to encourage PEER review activity, the proceedings and records of an organ procurement organization PEER review committee are confidential and not subject to discovery or introduction into evidence in a civil action arising out of the matters which are the subject of evaluation and review by the committee. A person who was in attendance at a meeting of the PEER review committee may not be permitted or required to testify in a civil action regarding evidence or other matters produced or presented during the proceedings of the committee or as to any findings, recommendations, evaluations, opinions or other actions of the committee or its members. However, information, documents or records otherwise discoverable or admissible from original sources are not to be construed as immune from discovery or use in a civil action merely because they were presented during the proceedings of the committee. A person who testifies before the committee or who is a member of the committee may not be prevented from testifying as to other matters within the person's knowledge; however, a witness may not be questioned concerning the person's participation on or testimony before the committee or opinions formed by the witness as a result of the PEER review committee hearings or proceedings.
(6) The provisions of subsection (5) of this section which limit the discovery of PEER review committee records and proceedings do not apply in a legal action brought by a PEER review committee against an employee of the organization or other person for alleged wrongdoing or in a legal action brought by an aggrieved employee of the organization or other person against the committee or a member of the committee for actions alleged to have been malicious.
SECTION 8. This act shall take effect and be in force from and after July 1, 2024.
Further, amend by striking the title in its entirety and inserting in lieu thereof the following:
AN ACT TO PROVIDE CERTAIN PROCEDURES FOR LAW ENFORCEMENT AGENCIES CONCERNING THE INVESTIGATION INTO A MISSING OR UNIDENTIFIED PERSON; TO REQUIRE A LAW ENFORCEMENT AGENCY TO INITIATE CERTAIN PROCEDURES UPON THE RECEIPT OF A CREDIBLE REPORT OF A MISSING OR UNIDENTIFIED PERSON; TO REQUIRE CERTAIN INFORMATION ABOUT THE MISSING OR UNIDENTIFIED PERSON TO BE ENTERED INTO THE NATIONAL MISSING AND UNIDENTIFIED PERSONS SYSTEM; TO PROHIBIT A LAW ENFORCEMENT AGENCY FROM REQUIRING A DELAY BEFORE ACCEPTING A REPORT OR REQUIRING THE APPEARANCE OF A NEXT OF KIN BEFORE INITIATING A MISSING PERSONS INVESTIGATION; TO REQUIRE A LAW ENFORCEMENT AGENCY OR THE STATE MEDICAL EXAMINER TO ENTER A REPORT OF A MISSING CHILD INTO THE NATIONAL MISSING AND UNIDENTIFIED PERSONS SYSTEM WITHOUT DELAY; TO REQUIRE THE STATE MEDICAL EXAMINER TEST THE DNA OF UNIDENTIFIED HUMAN REMAINS USING FORENSIC GENETIC GENEALOGY TESTING; TO AMEND SECTION 41-61-53, MISSISSIPPI CODE OF 1972, TO DEFINE THE TERMS "UNCLAIMED HUMAN REMAINS" AND "UNIDENTIFIED HUMAN REMAINS"; TO AMEND SECTION 41-61-59, MISSISSIPPI CODE OF 1972, TO PROVIDE THAT WHEN A BODY IS UNIDENTIFIED HUMAN REMAINS, THE BODY SHALL BE SUBMITTED TO THE STATE MEDICAL EXAMINER; TO AMEND SECTION 41-61-61, MISSISSIPPI CODE OF 1972, TO PROVIDE THAT UPON DISCOVERY UNIDENTIFIED HUMAN REMAINS OR ANATOMICAL MATERIAL SUSPECTED OF BEING PART OF THE HUMAN BODY SHALL BE SUBMITTED TO THE STATE MEDICAL EXAMINER; TO PROVIDE THAT THE WILLFUL DESTRUCTION OF A BODY, BODY PART OR UNIDENTIFIED HUMAN REMAINS SHALL BE A FELONY; TO REQUIRE THE COUNTY MEDICAL EXAMINER INVESTIGATOR TO ENTER INTO THE NATIONAL MISSING AND UNIDENTIFIED PERSONS SYSTEM ALL UNCLAIMED HUMAN REMAINS CASES WITHIN A CERTAIN AMOUNT OF DAYS; TO AMEND SECTION 41-39-5, MISSISSIPPI CODE OF 1972, TO REQUIRE ANY PHYSICIAN, HOSPITAL, FUNERAL DIRECTOR, EMBALMER, COUNTY MEDICAL EXAMINER OR OTHER PERSON ACQUIRING POSSESSION OF UNIDENTIFIED HUMAN REMAINS TO SUBMIT THE REMAINS TO THE STATE MEDICAL EXAMINER AND NOT SUBJECT THE REMAINS TO CREMATION, EMBALMING OR OTHER DESTRUCTIVE TREATMENT; TO AMEND SECTION 45-6-7, MISSISSIPPI CODE OF 1972, TO REQUIRE A CERTAIN AMOUNT OF TRAINING RELATED TO THE INVESTIGATION OF UNIDENTIFIED AND MISSING PERSONS FOR LAW ENFORCEMENT OFFICERS; TO DECLARE THAT THE RECORDS AND PROCEEDINGS OF AN ORGAN PROCUREMENT ORGANIZATION PEER REVIEW COMMITTEE ARE CONFIDENTIAL AND NOT DISCOVERABLE IN A CIVIL ACTION; TO DEFINE CERTAIN TERMS; TO DESCRIBE THE FUNCTIONS OF PEER REVIEW COMMITTEES; TO PROVIDE THAT PERSONS PROVIDING INFORMATION TO AND MEMBERS OF A PEER REVIEW COMMITTEE MAY NOT BE HELD LIABLE FOR ACTIONS TAKEN BY THE COMMITTEE; TO PROHIBIT A PEER REVIEW COMMITTEE AND ITS MEMBERS FROM REVEALING THE IDENTITY OF ORGAN DONORS AND RECIPIENTS; AND FOR RELATED PURPOSES.