The Idaho Board of Medicine is investigating complaints that Steve M. Skoumal screwed up at least ten autopsies. It was brought to the attention of the Board mainly because the local police questioned the results.
In one case Skoumal, a faculty member at Idaho State University in Pocatello (in Bannock County), ruled three deaths were caused by carbon monoxide poisoning. But, local Rexburg police (in Madison County) said that didn’t match with x-rays, or the fact a recently fired gun was found at the scene, or the fact that there were bullet holes in the victims.
Supporters of Skoumal say the police are just upset because he didn’t give them the answer they wanted to hear.
But this case brings up a good point; Idaho does not have standardized, dedicated, official local government coroner services. In many cases families of the deceased have to pay for a pathologist to conduct an autopsy, as one Pocatello doctor/lawyer said: “…people who brought the bodies have to pay for the doctor to do more autopsy or less autopsy.”-Richard Hearns
There is a state code concerning coroners, but in some Idaho counties coroners are elected. In other counties they are hired from local doctors. Officials say the tax revenues are not enough to support a dedicated 24/7 coroner (although taxes are pretty high here).
Skoumal is connected to three high profile cases in eastern and southeastern Idaho: Unsolved Madison County deaths, the death of a Bingham County woman whose granddaughter was prosecuted for homicide, and the 2006 murder of Pocatello High School student Cassie Jo Stoddart (fortunate the murderers incriminated themselves with their own video).
Skoumal is accused of misreading toxicology reports, being unable to determine knife wounds and bullet wounds. One of the complaints filed with the Board of Medicine accused him of not being a pathologist, he admitted he was not a certified pathologist.
It could be another year before the Idaho Board of Medicine holds an Administrative Hearing regarding the complaints.