(1) A crematory shall not, through its managers, employees, contractors, or agents, take custody of human remains without an attestation of positive identification on a form promulgated by the director by rule by:
The next of kin;
The county coroner or the county coroner's designee; or
An authorized person at the care facility where the deceased died.
(2) A crematory is responsible for identifying and tracking human remains from the time it takes custody of human remains until the:
Final disposition has occurred or the remains are returned to the person who has theright of final disposition;
Human remains are released in accordance with the instructions given by the personwho has the right of final disposition; or
Remains are released to a funeral establishment, another crematory, repository, orentity as authorized by the person who has the right of final disposition.
(3) The director shall adopt rules implementing this section that:
Establish what constitutes custody;
Define "care facility", "repository", and "entity";
Establish who is authorized to identify human remains at a care facility for a funeralestablishment; and
Prescribe the minimum standards for the positive identification and chain of custodyof human remains. A crematory may use the crematory's own procedures if the procedures meet or exceed the minimum standards of the rule promulgated by the director.
Source: L. 2019: Entire title R&RE with relocations, (HB 19-1172), ch. 136, p. 957, § 1, effective October 1.
Editor's note: This section is similar to former § 12-54-308 as it existed prior to 2019.