Wisconsin Code § 979.05

Inquests: procedure
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(1) An inquest shall be conducted by a circuit judge or a circuit court commissioner.
(2) The inquest shall be conducted before a jury unless the

district attorney, coroner, or medical examiner requests that the
inquest be conducted before the judge or circuit court commissioner only. If the inquest is to be conducted before a jury, a sufficient number of names of prospective jurors shall be selected
from the prospective juror list for the county in which the inquest
is to be held by the clerk of circuit court in the manner provided in
s. 756.06. The judge or circuit court commissioner conducting
the inquest shall summon the prospective jurors to appear before
the judge or circuit court commissioner at the time fixed in the
summons. The summons may be served by mail, or by personal
service if the judge, circuit court commissioner, or district attorney determines personal service to be appropriate. The summons
shall be in the form used to summon petit jurors in the circuit
courts of the county. Any person who fails to appear when summoned as an inquest juror is subject to a forfeiture of not more
than $40. The inquest jury shall consist of 6 jurors. If 6 jurors do
not remain from the number originally summoned after establishment of qualifications, the judge or circuit court commissioner
conducting the inquest may require the clerk of the circuit court
to select sufficient additional jurors’ names. Those persons shall
be summoned forthwith by the sheriff of the county.
(3) The judge or circuit court commissioner shall examine on
oath or affirmation each person who is called as a juror to discover whether the juror is related by blood, marriage or adoption
to the decedent, any member of the decedent’s family, the district
attorney, any other attorney appearing in the case or any members
of the office of the district attorney or of the office of any other
attorney appearing in the case, has expressed or formed any opinion regarding the matters being inquired into in the inquest or is
aware of or has any bias or prejudice concerning the matters being inquired into in the inquest. If any prospective juror is found
to be not indifferent or is found to have formed an opinion which
cannot be laid aside, that juror shall be excused. The judge or circuit commissioner may select one or more alternate jurors if the
inquest is likely to be protracted. This subsection does not limit
the right of the district attorney to supplement the judge’s or circuit commissioner’s examination of any prospective jurors as to
qualifications.
(4) When 6 jurors have been selected, the judge or circuit
court commissioner shall administer to them an oath or affirmation which shall be substantially in the following form:
You do solemnly swear (affirm) that you will diligently inquire and determine on behalf of this state when, and in what
manner and by what means, the person known as .... .... who is
now dead came to his or her death and that you will return a true
verdict thereon according to your knowledge, according to the evidence presented and according to the instructions given to you by
the .... (judge) (circuit court commissioner).
(5) Prior to the submission of evidence to the jury, the judge
or circuit court commissioner may instruct the jury on its duties
and on the substantive law regarding the issues which may be inquired into before the jury. The district attorney may, at any time
during the course of the inquest, make statements to the jury relating to procedural or evidentiary matters he or she and the judge
or circuit court commissioner deem appropriate. Section 972.12
applies to the conduct of the inquest jury.
(6) The judge or circuit court commissioner conducting the
inquest may order that proceedings be secret if the district attorney so requests or concurs.
(7) Inquest jurors shall receive the same compensation as jurors under s. 756.25.

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