A blistering state audit has found that Marylandโs Office of the Chief Medical Examiner (OCME) misclassified dozens of deaths in police custody โ many of which independent experts unanimously deemed homicides.
The review, ordered after former OCME Chief Dr. David Fowler testified in defense of George Floydโs killer, revealed that during Fowlerโs 17-year tenure, the office frequently downplayed police involvement and used discredited medical theories to avoid ruling deaths as homicides.
Of 87 in-custody deaths reviewed from 2003 to 2019, independent forensic pathologists found that 48 should have been classified as homicides. The OCME, under Fowler, had labeled only 12 that way.
In 36 of those cases, the office labeled deaths as accidents, natural causes, or undetermined โ even when all three outside reviewers agreed they were homicides.
โThis audit confirms what many feared โ that Marylandโs death investigations during that time were compromised by systemic bias and flawed procedures,โ said Attorney General Anthony Brown. โThese findings demand urgent accountability.โ
The report comes after a national backlash over Fowlerโs testimony in the 2021 trial of former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin. Fowler claimed that Floydโs death was โundetermined,โ not a homicide. The jury rejected that conclusion, convicting Chauvin of murder. In the aftermath, over 450 medical professionals signed a letter calling for a full investigation into Fowlerโs record.
โThis moment demands truth. The findings in this audit make clear that too many families were denied that truth,โ Maryland Gov. Wes Moore said in a statement accompanying the report.
The audit found that the OCME often relied on the widely discredited theory of โexcited deliriumโ to explain in-custody deaths โ using the term in nearly half the cases reviewed.ย
The phrase has been denounced by the American Medical Association, the American Psychiatric Association, and numerous human rights groups, who warn that itโs disproportionately applied to Black victims and used to shield law enforcement from scrutiny.
In cases where โexcited deliriumโ was listed as the cause, OCME almost always labeled the manner of death as โundetermined.โ Independent reviewers found that over half of those deaths were homicides.
The audit also raised concerns about systemic racial bias. Black people comprised over 70% of the decedents in the reviewed cases. OCME was significantly less likely to rule those deaths as homicides compared to similar cases involving white decedents.
Experts said the office repeatedly failed to acknowledge restraint โ particularly prone positioning and police pressure on the neck and back โ as a contributing factor. In many cases, OCMEโs findings violated the โbut-forโ standard, which requires classifying a death as a homicide if it would not have happened but for another personโs actions, regardless of intent.
โThis is not just about medical errors โ itโs about denying families justice and hiding the role of police in preventable deaths,โ said Dr. Alfredo Walker, co-chair of the auditโs design team.
The report calls for an end to the use of โexcited delirium,โ reforms to classification standards, better documentation and transparency, and the inclusion of mental health professionals in crisis responses.
โWe canโt change what happened,โ Moore stated, โbut we can make sure it never happens again.โ

