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History of Alcohol Youth Poisoning
deaths
Louisiana costs for Alcohol Use on the
Healthcare system.
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Facts on Firearms and Domestic Violence
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More Fact Sheets from
Violence Policy Center
Violence Prevention Research Program |
- In
2000, in homicides where the weapon was known, 50 percent
(1,342 of 2,701) of female homicide victims were killed with a
firearm. Of those female firearm homicides, 1,009 women (75
percent) were killed with a handgun.
- More
than five times as many women were murdered by an intimate
acquaintance (605) than by a stranger (113) in the year 2000.
Additionally, while firearm homicides involving male victims
were mostly intra-gender, 95 percent of female
firearm homicide victims were murdered by a male.
-
Domestic violence against women is a disturbingly common
occurrence in the United States. Estimates from the National
Crime Victimization Survey (NCVS) indicate that from 1993 to
1998, women were victims of violent crimes by their intimate
partners an average of more than 935,000 times a year. During
this period, intimate-partner violence comprised 22 percent of
all violent crimes against women. Although firearms are used
in a relatively small percentage of domestic violence
incidents, when a firearm is present, domestic violence
can and all too often does turn into domestic homicide.
Congress, recognizing the unique and deadly role firearms play
in domestic violence passed the Protective Order Gun Ban in
1994. The law prohibits gun possession by a person against
whom there is a restraining or protective order for domestic
violence. In 1996, Congress passed the Domestic Violence
Misdemeanor Gun Ban, which prohibits anyone convicted of a
misdemeanor crime of domestic violence or child abuse from
purchasing or possessing a gun.
- A 1997
study that examined the risk factors for violent death for
women in the home found that when there were one or more guns
in the home, the risk of suicide among women increased nearly
five times and the risk of homicide increased more than three
times. The increased risk of homicide associated with firearms
was attributable to homicides at the hands of a spouse,
intimate acquaintance, or close relative.
- An
analysis of female domestic homicides (a woman murdered by a
spouse, intimate acquaintance, or close relative) showed that
prior domestic violence in the household made a woman 14.6
times more likely, and having one or more guns in the home
made a woman 7.2 times more likely, to be the victim of
such a homicide.
- The
circumstances of firearms violence differ significantly
between men and women. Compared to a man, a woman is far more
likely to be killed by her spouse, an intimate acquaintance,
or a family member than murdered by a stranger or an
unidentified intruder. A 1976 to 1987 analysis of Federal
Bureau of Investigation data revealed that more than twice as
many women were shot and killed by their husbands or intimate
acquaintances than were murdered by strangers using firearms,
knives, or any other means.
- Between
1976 and 1996, 65 percent of the male and female victims of
intimate partner homicides were killed with a firearm. And
while rates of intimate partner homicide have been declining,
the ratio of female-to-male victims has risen. In other words,
when an intimate-partner homicide occurs, it is increasingly
likely that a woman is the victim rather than a man.
- Having
a gun in the home makes it three times more likely that you or
someone you care about will be murdered by a family member or
intimate partner.
- A
firearm in the home may be a key factor in the escalation of
nonfatal spousal abuse to homicide. In a study of family and
intimate assaults for the city of Atlanta, Georgia, in 1984,
firearm-associated family and intimate assaults were 12 times
more likely to result in death than non-firearm associated
assaults between family and intimates.
- The
effects of firearm-related domestic violence last long beyond
the actual crime. In a study on child witnesses of marital
violence, the authors noted that children who observed
incidents of domestic violence involving the use or threat of
a firearm exhibited higher levels of behavior problems than
children who did not.
Endnotes
- Data
from the 2000 FBI Supplementary Homicide Report. Analysis
performed by the Violence Policy Center.
- Data
from the 2000 FBI Supplementary Homicide Report. Analysis
performed by the Violence Policy Center.
-
Violence Policy Center, When Men Murder Women: An Analysis
of 1999 Homicide Data, October 2001, p. 1.
- James
E. Bailey, MD, MPH, et al., "Risk Factors for Violence Death
of Women in the Home," Archives of Internal Medicine
157, no. 7 (1997): 777-782.
- James
E. Bailey, MD, MPH, et al., "Risk Factors for Violence Death
of Women in the Home," Archives of Internal Medicine
157, no. 7 (1997): 777-782.
- Arthur
Kellermann, MD, MPH, et al., "Men, Women, and Murder:
Gender-Specific Differences in Rates of Fatal Violence and
Victimization," Journal of Trauma 33, (July 1992): 1-5.
-
Lawrence A. Greenfeld et al., "Violence by Intimates: An
Analysis of Data on Crimes by Current or Former Spouses,
Boyfriends, and Girlfriends," Bureau of Justice Statistics
Factbook (March 1998): 10.
- Arthur
Kellermann, MD, MPH, et al., "Gun Ownership as a Risk Factor
for Homicide in the Home," New England Journal of Medicine
329, no. 15 (1993): 1084-1091.
- Linda
Saltzman, PhD, et al., "Weapon Involvement and Injury Outcomes
in Family and Intimate Assaults," JAMA 267, no. 22
(1992): 3043-3047.
- Arthur
Kellermann, MD, MPH, et al., "Firearms and Family Violence,"
Emergency Medicine Clinics of North America 17 (August
1999): 699-716, citing Ernest N. Jouriles et al., "Knives,
Guns, and Interparent Violence: Relations with Child Behavior
Problems," Journal of Family Psychology 12, no. 2
(1998): 178-194.
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