
@article{ref1,
title="Homicide-suicide in police families: an analysis of cases from 2007-2014",
journal="Journal of forensic practice",
year="2015",
author="Klinoff, Vera A. and Van Hasselt, Vincent B. and Black, Ryan A.",
volume="17",
number="2",
pages="101-116",
abstract="PURPOSE     - There is a burgeoning body of evidence showing that police officers are at a higher risk of committing homicide-suicide than civilian counterparts. The purpose of this paper is to provide an update and expansion of previous work by Violanti (2007) on homicide-suicide in law enforcement families.   Design/methodology/approach     - Police-perpetrated homicide-suicide cases were obtained through an online forum dedicated to topics related to domestic violence in police families. A total of 43 police-perpetrated homicide-suicides was identified and reviewed for presence/absence of variables similar to those examined by Violanti (2007), with the addition of new factors. χ2 analyses were performed to test for inter-study differences in proportions on variables of interest.   Findings     - Results indicated a significantly smaller proportion of homicide-suicide incidents perpetrated by State officers. The remainder of the variable frequencies remained relatively consistent between studies. Of particular importance, domestic violence and divorce/estrangement were salient precursors in these cases.   Research limitations/implications     - Data were obtained from an online forum and media publications, which may not be regulated for accuracy and may contain biased data.   Practical implications     - The current results, combined with the prior research, underscore the need for prevention programs and departmental policies that: increase the accessibility of mental health services, increase the availability of services for victims of police-involved intimate partner violence, and stress the enforcement of current domestic violence laws.   Social implications     - Results indicate that domestic violence is still a significant problem in law enforcement personnel, with the potential for lethal consequences.   Originality/value     - To the authors knowledge, this is only the second study involving a formal analysis of police-involved homicide-suicide cases.   Keywords: Domestic violence, Intimate partner violence, Homicide-suicide, Murder-suicide, Police mental health, Police suicide  Publisher:     Emerald Group Publishing Limited<p /> <p>Language: en</p>",
language="en",
issn="2050-8794",
doi="10.1108/JFP-07-2014-0019",
url="http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/JFP-07-2014-0019"
}