Interactions Between Offender and Crime Characteristics Leading to a Lethal Outcome in Cases of Sexually-Motivated Abductions

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_BB3D37EF2AC0
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Interactions Between Offender and Crime Characteristics Leading to a Lethal Outcome in Cases of Sexually-Motivated Abductions
Journal
Sexual Abuse
Author(s)
Beauregard Eric, Chopin Julien
ISSN
1079-0632
1573-286X
ISSN-L
1079-0632
Publication state
In Press
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Language
english
Abstract
Despite the widespread public concern regarding abduction, research on this type of crime is scarce. This lack of research is even more pronounced when looking at cases that end with the death of the victim. In fact, all of the research looking at lethal outcomes in cases of abductions has focused exclusively on child victims and has failed to consider the interactions at the multivariate level between the factors related to the death of the victim. Therefore, the aim of the study is to identify offender and crime characteristics - as well as their interactions - associated with a lethal outcome in sexually-motivated abductions using a combination of logistic regression and neural network analyses on a sample of 281 cases (81 cases ending with a lethal outcome, random sample of 200 comparison cases). Findings show that sexually-motivated abductions ending with a lethal outcome are more likely to be characterized by an offender who is a loner, forensically aware, and who who uses a weapon and restraints, and who sexually penetrates and beats a known victim. The neural network analysis show that three different pathways lead to a lethal outcome in sexually-motivated abductions. Such findings are important for correctional practices.
Keywords
Psychiatry and Mental health, General Psychology
Pubmed
Web of science
Open Access
Yes
Create date
07/11/2023 13:26
Last modification date
25/04/2024 7:00
Usage data