Louisiana
Are Autopsy Reports Public in Louisiana? (2026)

In Louisiana, the full autopsy report is generally not an open public record. It is released to the deceased's next of kin and immediate family, the family physician, and law enforcement, while the coroner's public report (with cause and manner of death) is open to anyone. Autopsy photographs and video are confidential by statute.
Are Autopsy Reports Public in Louisiana?
In Louisiana, the full autopsy report is not an open public record for the general public. Under La. R.S. 44:19, the coroner's report and a fact-of-death letter are public records, but the detailed autopsy report is restricted to specific people.
The autopsy report is released to next of kin, immediate family, succession representatives, and law enforcement for official use. The general public cannot obtain it unless a court orders it opened or it is used in the investigation of criminal activity.
Autopsy photographs, video, and other visual images are deemed confidential by statute and are not public records. These can be released only to family, their designees, law enforcement, certain forensic professionals, or by court order or subpoena.
This makes Louisiana more restrictive than states where autopsy reports are fully open. The cause and manner of death are publicly available through the coroner's report, but the underlying autopsy narrative is access-controlled.
Who Performs Autopsies in Louisiana?
Louisiana uses a parish coroner system rather than a statewide medical examiner. Each of the 64 parishes has an elected coroner who investigates deaths and may perform or order autopsies. In larger parishes the coroner is a physician supported by forensic pathologists.

Under La. R.S. 13:5713, the coroner investigates deaths that are sudden, violent, unexpected, suspicious, or of unknown cause, as well as deaths from accident, drowning, electrocution, or where a criminal violation may have contributed.
The coroner may order an autopsy at his discretion in any of these cases. An autopsy is mandatory when there is a reasonable probability that the violation of a criminal statute contributed to the death.
Not every death receives a full autopsy. Many investigations are resolved through external examination, scene review, medical history, and toxicology without a complete autopsy.
Who Can Request a Louisiana Autopsy Report?
In Louisiana, the autopsy report is available to the deceased's next of kin and immediate family, not the general public. La. R.S. 44:19 lists eligible relatives, including the spouse, parents, siblings, children, grandchildren, nieces, nephews, aunts, and uncles of the decedent.
Succession representatives and the deceased's designated family physician or last attending physician can also obtain the report, and a family physician's request typically requires written family authorization. Law enforcement agencies receive copies for official use.
The general public can access the report only if a court orders it opened or it becomes part of a criminal investigation record under the Public Records Act. Otherwise, requests from people outside the family circle will be denied.
If you are unsure whether you qualify, the parish coroner's office can confirm who is eligible before you submit a request.
How to Get an Autopsy or Toxicology Report in Louisiana
To get a Louisiana autopsy report, contact the coroner's office in the parish where the death was investigated, not a statewide agency. Each parish coroner handles its own requests, forms, and fees.

Most parish coroner offices accept requests in person with photo identification, or by mail or fax with a color copy of your photo ID and a completed autopsy request form. The Caddo Parish Coroner, for example, accepts requests in person, by mail, or by fax with photo ID.
Under La. R.S. 44:19, the coroner provides one copy of the autopsy report to next of kin at no charge. The public-records fee for any additional copy is the same as the fee charged by the state registrar for a death certificate. Toxicology results are part of the finalized autopsy report.
Expect a wait. Autopsy and toxicology reports can take several months to finalize depending on caseload. While a death is under active or pending investigation, the office holds the report until it is finalized, and you will receive your copy only once it is available for release.
Autopsy Report vs Death Certificate in Louisiana
An autopsy report and a death certificate are different Louisiana records. The death certificate is the official vital record issued through the Louisiana Department of Health, Vital Records Registry, and it lists a brief cause-of-death line.
The autopsy report is the coroner's detailed examination, including findings, toxicology, and the basis for the cause and manner of death. It explains how the office reached the conclusion that appears on the certificate.
You order a Louisiana death certificate from Vital Records, while you request the autopsy report from the parish coroner. The death certificate is restricted to family and authorized parties, and the full autopsy report is similarly limited to next of kin and immediate family.
For a broader overview of how autopsy access works across states, see Are Autopsies Public Records?.
Louisiana Autopsy Report Facts
| Item | Louisiana |
|---|---|
| Full autopsy report public? | Restricted (not open to the general public) |
| Coroner's report public? | Yes, public record under La. R.S. 44:19 |
| Autopsy photos/video public? | No, confidential by statute |
| Who can request | Next of kin, immediate family, succession reps, family physician, law enforcement |
| System | Parish coroner (64 parishes), no statewide medical examiner |
| Where to request | Coroner's office in the parish of investigation |
| Fee | One free copy for next of kin; additional copies same as a death certificate |
| Pending-case hold | Report withheld until autopsy and toxicology are finalized |
| Governing law | La. R.S. 13:5713; La. R.S. 44:19 |

Disclaimer: This page provides general information about Louisiana autopsy and coroner records and is not legal advice. Access rules, forms, and fees vary by parish and can change. Always verify the current process with the parish coroner's office before submitting a request.
Sources
This page is based on the Louisiana Revised Statutes (La. R.S. 13:5713 and La. R.S. 44:19), the Louisiana Department of Health coroner resources, and Louisiana parish coroner offices.
Up: Louisiana Death Records | Hub: Death Records by State
Sources and References
- La. R.S. 13:5713 — Coroner duties; autopsies and investigations(legis.la.gov).gov
- La. R.S. 44:19 — Records of a coroner; autopsy photographs, video, and other visual images(legis.la.gov).gov
- Louisiana Department of Health — Coroners and Death Investigator Resources(ldh.la.gov).gov
- Caddo Parish Coroner — Autopsy Report Requests(caddocoroner.com).gov
- East Baton Rouge Parish Coroner — Information for Families(ebrcoroner.com).gov