reSee.it Podcast Summary
Theo Von interviews Toby Savoy, a death investigator and coroner in Lafayette, Louisiana, about the day‑to‑day work, cases, and the culture surrounding death in a rural parish. Savoy explains that in Louisiana a coroner’s office functions as an elected medical‑legal authority, with death investigators like him handling most on‑scene work. Calls come from Sheriff’s offices, city police, hospitals, and nursing homes, and cases are categorized as natural, accidental, homicide, or suicide. Many natural deaths can be released over the phone without an on‑scene visit, but officers and detectives may accompany investigations in suspicious cases. When on scene, they carry a gear bag and collect toxicology samples, often drawing blood from the heart or accessing eye fluid (vitreous humor) via a horizontal needle to avoid clotting; if needed, they can sample liver tissue. They also examine the residence and surroundings to understand the decedent’s life and circumstances, not just the body. Savoy recounts cases from bayous with bodies floating in water, where decomposition and animal scavenging can obscure cause, to a single case where an elderly couple’s routine was misread as foul play and subsequent autopsy clarified the death. He stresses collaboration with law enforcement, noting that deputies and detectives bring historical context and informants, while coroner‑level medical knowledge helps interpret signs of trauma or medical death. He describes the practical reality of scene work, such as how sometimes soldiers or inexperienced responders have to be guided away from disturbing evidence, and how the body bag and chain of custody are critical to preserving evidence. He also shares vivid anecdotes: a body with arms removed found in a ditch, a foot recovered weeks later in a case, and mass‑death scenes involving boaters or wrecks where federal agencies cooperate.
The discussion shifts to death by overdose, with Savoy noting fentanyl and crystal meth have driven a surge in ODs across all ages, and explaining how the opioid crisis stemmed in part from the now‑well‑documented Press Ganey pain‑control push in hospitals that encouraged aggressive analgesia and contributed to widespread prescription opioid addiction. He contrasts crack era deaths with fentanyl, explaining fentanyl’s potency and the growing problem of fentanyl laced with other drugs like xylazine (“tranq”). He discusses the role coroner’s offices play in evaluating drug involvement, toxicity, and multiple substances, and mentions the rise in polypharmacy and the prevalence of dual diagnoses requiring rehab or psychiatric care, which the system often fails to provide in a timely way. Savoy speaks candidly about the emotional toll: tragedies during holidays, the pain of losing young people to drugs or gun violence, and the personal responsibility he feels to try to help families despite the limitations of the system.
Savoy covers the ordinary and the extreme: the constant threat to officers on scene, the logistics of autopsy and disease, the sometimes grisly realities of animal involvement in death, and the steady need for compassion, humor, and resilience. Savoy reflects on the human side—how the job shapes his faith, his coping through music, and his ongoing commitment to reduce preventable deaths by educating families and communities. He closes with a sense of Louisiana’s character: a place where death is common, but life and humor persist, and where every day is a gift.