Raschael Ellering, a death investigator for the Hennepin County medical examiner's office, looked over her shoulder as she headed down the stairwell to the basement. "Can you smell it?" she asked.
She was referring to the body of a man that had lain dead on a bed in his hot apartment for days. The stench pushed out of the body bag and beyond tightly sealed doors to hang stubbornly in the hallways. In the processing room, a technician removed clothes from the swollen, peeling, purple body in preparation for a possible autopsy.
For Ellering and her colleagues in the investigative unit of the medical examiner's office in downtown Minneapolis, the sensory invasion of death and decay is routine. A recent day's work included rolling a 350-pound body onto a gurney, running her fingers through the fine hair of an infant to discern its color, checking the groin of an elderly man, dead for two hours, to see if he'd recently had heart surgery and comforting the estranged relative of a man who'd died weeks before.
The work they do gets Hollywood glamour treatment on television shows. In the real world, the job means wearing waterproof boots to protect feet from bursting blisters on bodies, inexpensive clothing they can easily trash and post-work swims in chlorinated pools to clear nasal passages of the stench.
The investigators do the scientific and the sensitive work of death, often at the same time. When they arrive at a death scene, sometimes a body will be days old. Sometimes the death will have been sudden, and distraught, angry relatives and neighbors are swirling at the site.
"That's the best thing about this job: I am literally never going to go to a scene where it's the same as the day before," Ellering said.
Hennepin County, the regional hub for deaths in Dakota and Scott counties, performs about 1,100 autopsies per year. The post-mortem exams by physicians are conducted when a death meets certain criteria, such as a young person dying without warning.
Chief medical examiner Andrew Baker touts the office's national accreditation and leadership role in setting standards and training across the country. He credits the work of the "flexible, mobile" investigators for the office's reputation even though they toil without acclaim day and night from the basement of the county medical examiner's office in the shadow of the new Minnesota Vikings stadium.