Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://anrows.intersearch.com.au/anrowsjspui/handle/1/16178
Record ID: 2777749d-4455-45a9-be26-fd9da91f9a98
Web resource: https://link.springer.com/content/pdf/10.1007/s41887-017-0011-1.pdf
Type: Journal Article
Title: Police attempts to predict domestic murder and serious sssaults : is early warning possible yet?
Authors: Thornton, Sara
Keywords: Domestic violence;United Kingdom;Physical violence;Sexual assault;Prevention;Homicide;Policing
Topic: Sexual violence
Year: 2017
Citation: Online, 28 Aug 2017
Notes:  Abstract

Research Question What facts known to police, if any, could have predicted the 118
domestic and family murders and near-murders in the Thames Valley (UK) police area
over a recent three-year period?

Data Thames Valley Police records were examined for 118 victims and 120 offenders
in all 118 cases of Bdeadly^ domestic violence: murder, attempted murder, manslaughter,
and grievous bodily harm with intent in calendar years 2007, 2008 and 2009. Police
National Computer (PNC) and other records of police contact with those persons prior
to the cases identified for this prediction study were also coded, as well as the PNC
records of a case-control sample of 150 male and 100 female offenders in less serious
violent crimes. Local police risk assessments, including the DASH protocol, were
coded for deadly violence cases with prior police contact.

Methods Risk assessments made during prior police contacts with domestic violence
cases during the time period were coded for accuracy of forecasts. Characteristics of
offenders and victims in deadly violence were also compared to characteristics of the
case-control sample, calculating the relative-risk ratios between the two groups for the
presence of factors that further research could explore as possible predictors of deadly
domestic violence.

Findings In 55% of deadly violence cases, there was no prior recorded contact by
police with the victim; a further 21% of victims had only one prior police contact. Not
one of the 13 murder cases with any prior police contact had ever been assessed by
responding officers as Bhigh risk^ based on DASH or its predecessor, for a 100% false
negative rate of prediction on risk of murder and an 89% false negative rate for any
deadly violence (only 6 cases with prior contact had been classified as high risk). In
contrast, during the same time period, 2721 other domestic violence cases yielded
Bhigh-risk^ assessments but were not actually followed by deadly violence. Yet the
case control study found male offenders who committed serious domestic assaults were
over three times more likely than other violent offenders to be have had markers of
suicidal tendencies.

Conclusions Predicting deadly domestic violence based on intelligence from prior
police contacts does not appear possible at present, given these findings that less than
half of these cases had prior police contact, and that when contact did occur, the
relationships were assessed by the DASH protocol or its predecessor as not high risk
in 89% of those cases. A more promising predictor for male offenders in these cases,
even without prior contact, may be a prior marker for suicide (ideation, threats or
attempts), but use of that marker requires further research on the extent to which it can
be identified before the deadly violence occurs, either from police contacts or other
sources, so that more intensive efforts can be undertaken to prevent deadly violence in
the truly high-risk cases.
Open access
See: https://link.springer.com/content/pdf/10.1007%2Fs41887-017-0011-1.pdf
URI: https://anrows.intersearch.com.au/anrowsjspui/handle/1/16178
Appears in Collections:Journal Articles

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