PBS Frontline Program: Post Mortem

Jan 30, 2011 | 0 comments

Heads up on a television special of interest: Frontline: Post Mortem. The show is airing this coming Tuesday, February 1 at 9:00 p.m. (check your local listings). A description from PBS:

Every day, nearly 7,000 people die in America. And when these deaths happen suddenly, or under suspicious circumstances, we assume there will be a thorough investigation, just like we see on CSI. But the reality is very different.

In over 1,300 counties across America, elected coroners, many with no medical or scientific background, are in charge of death investigations. Nationwide there is a severe shortage of competent forensic pathologists to do autopsies.

The rate of autopsies – the gold standard of death investigation – has plummeted over the decades. As a result, murderers go free and innocent people go to jail. FRONTLINE correspondent Lowell Bergman reports the results of a joint investigation with ProPublica, NPR, and the Investigative Reporting Program at UC Berkeley.

A Good Goodbye