Forensic Science Institute

Tag: behavioral study

Research: Behavioral Characteristics of Maternal Filicide: A Case Study

The purpose of this study is to identify the history and behavioral trends of maternal filicide in the United States.  This study examines six cases of filicide that were highly publicized by the media.  The media tends to overdramatize certain aspects of cases, which then leads to the overshadowing of actual facts.  The data was gathered from court records, police reports, televised offender interviews, and records of psychiatric assessments.  The cases that were reviewed were homicides that took place between 1997 and 2005.  The study examined the childhood, mental history, prior criminal history, motives and the family-of-origin for each of the filicidal women.  The mean age of the mothers at the time they committed the offense was 29.83 years.  The women ranged in age from 18 to 38 years.  The six women in the study killed a combined total of 17 children (16 males and 1 female).  Males were overrepresented as victims in this study compared to other research involving maternal filicide.

Posted on April 16, 2019 by Dr. Mark McCoy

Research: Church Shooting in the United States

In recent years, Americans have been shocked by the increasing number of mass murders occurring in and around churches in the U.S.  Research has formerly examined characteristics of school shooters, workplace shooters, or grouped an excess of varying incidents into the broad category of mass murder, but the behavioral study of church shootings is extremely limited.  It is proposed that research be conducted into incident analysis and the common behavioral characteristics of church shooters to determine if a profile can be developed which will aid in understanding and dealing with those who chose to target churches and their members for extreme and indiscriminate violence.

Posted on April 16, 2019 by Dr. Mark McCoy

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