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Terms Used In Louisiana Revised Statutes 8:681

  • Burial: means the placement of human remains in a grave. See Louisiana Revised Statutes 8:1
  • Discovery: Lawyers' examination, before trial, of facts and documents in possession of the opponents to help the lawyers prepare for trial.
  • Disposition: means the interment, burial, cremation, or anatomical donation of the body of a deceased person or parts of the body of a deceased person. See Louisiana Revised Statutes 8:1
  • Human remains: means the body of a deceased person and includes the body in any stage of decomposition, as well as cremated remains. See Louisiana Revised Statutes 8:1
  • Human skeletal remains: means any part of the body of a deceased human being in any stage of decomposition. See Louisiana Revised Statutes 8:673
  • Owner: means a person to whom the cemetery authority has transferred full title to or the right of use of or interment in any cemetery space and who appears as the title holder in the official records of the cemetery authority. See Louisiana Revised Statutes 8:1
  • Person: means an individual, corporation, limited liability company, partnership, joint venture, association, trust, or any other legal entity. See Louisiana Revised Statutes 8:1
  • Secretary: means the secretary of the Department of Culture, Recreation and Tourism or the person designated by the secretary to administer the provisions of this Chapter. See Louisiana Revised Statutes 8:673
  • Unmarked burial site: means the immediate area where one or more human skeletal remains are found in the ground that is not in a recognized and maintained municipal, fraternal, religious, or family cemetery, or a cemetery authorized by the Louisiana Cemetery Board. See Louisiana Revised Statutes 8:673

A.  Whenever an unmarked burial site, human skeletal remains from an unmarked burial site, or burial artifacts are reported to the secretary, the disposition of unmarked burial sites, human skeletal remains, or burial artifacts shall proceed as follows:

(1)  Every reasonable effort is to be made to restore the unmarked burial site and to avoid disturbing the human skeletal remains or burial artifacts:

(a)  If the secretary determines that the burial site has significant scientific value, the secretary may issue a permit for scientific study.

(b)  Any agreement by the owner of the property to leave the unmarked burial site undisturbed shall not constitute consent on the owner’s part to allow relatives of the deceased or any other interested parties free access to the site without the owner’s permission.

(2)  The secretary shall make reasonable efforts to identify and locate persons who can establish direct kinship with or descent from the individual whose remains have been found.

(3)  If the unmarked burial site or the human skeletal remains can be shown to have ethnic affinity with a living Native American tribe, the secretary shall notify the tribe of the discovery.

(4)  If the human skeletal remains must be removed, then control of the disposition of these remains shall be in the following order:

(a)  If any direct relations or descendants are found, such person or persons shall have the right to control the disposition of the human skeletal remains in accordance with La. Rev. Stat. 8:659.

(b)  If the human skeletal remains can be shown to have ethnic affinity to any living tribe of Native Americans, then the tribe shall have control of the disposition of the human skeletal remains.

(c)  If no direct relation or descendant is found or if no ethnic affinity of the human skeletal remains to any living Native American tribe can be shown or if no direct relation or descendant or Native American tribe takes responsibility for the reinterment of the human remains, then the secretary shall determine the proper disposition of the human remains.

B.  If a permit has been issued pursuant to La. Rev. Stat. 8:676(A)(6), the cost of disinterment, reinterment, or study of the human skeletal remains shall be paid by the persons or parties requesting the permit.  In the event the secretary must reinter the remains, the burial shall be paid in the same manner as an indigent or pauper burial.

C.  All burial artifacts found in an unmarked burial site shall become the property of the state and the secretary shall be the custodian thereof.  The disposition of the burial artifacts shall be made by the secretary in accordance with regulations.  The secretary may donate the burial artifacts to an educational institution, a public museum, or a Native American tribe for display and study purposes.  In no event, however, shall the secretary or any recipient sell the burial artifacts.

Acts 1991, No. 704, §1, eff. Jan. 1, 1992; Acts 2009, No. 438, §6A.