This study defined sexual killing specifying that killing should be directly linked to sexual arousal, and sampled 48 sexual killers, operationalized to include only those engaging in post-mortem sexual interference, with one or two known female victims (non-serial), from prison service national (England and Wales) databases. These sexual killers were compared with 48 non-homicide, life or indeterminately sentenced sexual aggressors on psychological and crime scene characteristics.
Contrary to previous research, fatal outcomes were associated with neither stranger victims nor weapon presence; sexual killing was characterized by severity of violence less so than non-fatal assault. Sexual killers more often reported problems with emotional loneliness, empathic concern, and sexual entitlement than the sexual aggressors.
Theoretical and applied implications are discussed.
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By: Higgs T1, Carter AJ2, Stefanska EB3, Glorney E4.
- 1University of Nottingham, UK tamsin.higgs@noms.gsi.gov.uk.
- 2National Offender Management Service, London, UK.
- 3University of Birmingham, UK.
- 4Royal Holloway, University of London, UK.
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