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Coroner's Office Statistics

Overview

More than 50% of all deaths in Sacramento County are reportable Coroner's Office cases as required by the Government Code and Health and Safety Code.

All reported cases involve a Deputy Coroner investigative component and approximately 20% require an autopsy, external body review, or medical record evaluation by the Coroner's Office to determine the cause of death.

There are five classifications for the manner of death in Coroner cases:

Accident
Accidental death including drowning, accidental overdose, falls, motor vehicle accidents, etc.
Natural
Any natural disease process including, but not limited to, heart disease, SIDS, chronic ethanol abuse, etc.
Suicide
Action taken by someone to end their own life. It must be an overt action versus a habitual action.
Homicide
When a person is killed by one or more persons. This is different than "murder". Murder is the "unlawful" taking of a human life by another. For example, if a police officer kills someone in the line of duty, it is a homicide but it is not necessarily a murder. All murders are homicides, but all homicides are not murders.
Undetermined
Usually an interim classification, indicating a level of uncertainty about the circumstances surrounding a death, which is usually changed once the results of the autopsy are received. Sometimes, however, the cause of death and/or the circumstances of the death cannot be fully determined, in which case, the classification remains undetermined.

Grand Totals

Coroner Cases By Manner of Death 1998-2007
YearAccidentHomicideNaturalSuicideUndeterminedTotal
Totals46439946351158276814,338
199835786608128801259
199933787614144581240
200037584603134791275
2001431956311531241434
200244192625166721396
200346898738168741546
2004535111640174641524
2005569123642176781588
2006572120674173771616
200755898576166621460
       
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