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Prior Crime Specialization and Its Relationship to Homicide Crime Scene Behavior Type

NCJ Number
232393
Journal
Homicide Studies Volume: 14 Issue: 4 Dated: November 2010 Pages: 377-399
Author(s)
Amber M. Horning; C. Gabrielle Salfati; Kristan Crawford
Date Published
November 2010
Length
23 pages
Annotation
This study identified four types of prior criminal offending patterns.
Abstract
The present study explored the link between offenders' prior criminal specialization (violent crime, sexual crime, or burglary/theft) and subsequent homicide crime scene type (exploit, control, distance) in 77 U.S. cases of single-offender/single-victim homicides. Specialists as compared to those with no prior criminal history were significantly more likely to engage in goal directed behaviors such as controlling the victim, controlling the outcome, and exploitative behaviors (sex and theft). Sexual crime specialists specifically were the more distinct subtype. The findings indicated differences in how first-time homicide offenders approach the crime scene and are discussed in line with the usefulness to homicide investigators. Figure, tables, and references (Published Abstract)