State of NJ-Regional Medical Examiner's Office
Public SafetyView the employees at
State of NJ-Regional Medical Examiner's Office-
joe speziali investigator at State of NJ-Regional Medical Examiner's Office
-
United States
-
Rising Star
Leesa Salzano Administrative Analyst at State of NJ-Regional Medical Examiner's Office-
Trenton, New Jersey, United States
-
Rising Star
Kim williams-ricks medical records manager at State of NJ-Regional Medical Examiner's Office-
Newark, New Jersey, United States
-
Rising Star
MONETTE SIMPAO Registered Nurse at State of NJ-Regional Medical Examiner's Office-
New York City Metropolitan Area
-
Rising Star
katalina suarez exe secretary at State of NJ-Regional Medical Examiner's Office-
Jersey City, New Jersey, United States
-
Rising Star
Overview
The NJ Office of the State Medical Examiner (OSME) is established within the Division of Criminal Justice of the Office of the Attorney General/Department of Law & Public Safety and is under the immediate supervision of a State Medical Examiner (SME). The OSME is responsible for the administration and enforcement of State laws and regulations relating to the medical examiner system and medicolegal death investigation in NJ. The SME directly supervises the State’s Northern and Southern Regional Medical Examiner Offices (NRMEO and SRMEO), providing medicolegal death investigation services to 6 of the 21 NJ counties, and serves in a general supervisory capacity over the remaining county medical examiners and their offices. In NJ, a medicolegal death investigation must be conducted by a duly certified medical examiner in all cases of human death that occur under circumstances that invoke a public interest for the purpose of public health, public safety and the administration of justice. These cases include all violent deaths whether by homicide, suicide or accident; deaths under suspicious or unusual circumstances; deaths of inmates of State or county institutions; deaths of infants and children under the age of three; and deaths from causes which might constitute a threat to the public health.
-