- (a) Upon request of the director or a domestic violence fatality review team, all medical examiners, physicians acting under the direction of a coroner, providers of medical care, state agencies, and county agencies shall disclose to the department and the domestic violence fatality review team all information and records regarding the circumstances of a victim's death so that the department may conduct a multidisciplinary and multiagency review of domestic violence fatalities pursuant to this part.
- (b) Members of the domestic violence fatality review team shall develop procedures related to near-deaths resulting from intimate partner violence.
- (c) The department may enter into memoranda of understanding with the relevant state agencies and branches of government and county agencies to obtain information relating to near-deaths resulting from intimate partner violence.
- (d) To the extent that this section conflicts with other state confidentiality laws, the provisions of this section shall require disclosure, notwithstanding the existence of a specific confidentiality statute.
(e) An entity represented on a domestic violence fatality review team and any entity cooperating with an entity represented on a domestic violence fatality review team may share with other members of the team:
- (1) Information in its possession concerning the victim;
- (2) Information in its possession concerning any person who was in contact with the victim; and
- (3) Any other information in its possession deemed by the entity to be pertinent to the domestic violence fatality review.
- (f) Any information shared by an entity with other members of a domestic violence fatality review team is subject to the same restrictions on disclosure of the information or the records as the originating entity.
- (g) To the extent possible, the review conducted pursuant to section 321-472 shall commence no later than one year following the death, near-death, or suicide.
[L 2006, c 82, pt of §1; am L 2015, c 203, §2]