Maine Code § 22-3033

Limitation on liability of certain persons appointed or retained
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1. Additional immunities. In addition to all existing tort immunities enumerated in the Maine
Tort Claims Act:
A. A medical examiner may not be held liable for damages for any injury or damage that results
from the exercise and discharge of any of the medical examiner's official duties, unless it can be
shown that the injury or damage resulted from gross negligence on the part of the medical examiner;
[PL 2001, c. 222, §12 (NEW).]
B. A pathologist performing an autopsy at the request of a medical examiner or the Chief Medical
Examiner may not be held liable for damages for any injury or damage that results from the
performance of the autopsy unless it can be shown that the injury or damage resulted from the gross
negligence of the pathologist; [PL 2013, c. 113, §11 (AMD).]
C. A professional consultant, who at the request of a medical examiner or the Chief Medical
Examiner conducts an examination and renders a report, may not be held liable for damages for
any injury or damage that results from the performance of the examination unless it can be shown
that the injury or damage resulted from the gross negligence of the consultant; and [PL 2013, c.
113, §11 (AMD).]
D. A medicolegal death investigator may not be held liable for damages for any injury or damage
that results from the exercise and discharge of any of the medicolegal death investigator's official
duties unless it can be shown that the injury or damage resulted from gross negligence on the part
of the medicolegal death investigator. [PL 2013, c. 113, §12 (NEW).]
[PL 2013, c. 113, §§11, 12 (AMD).]

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