| Literature DB >> 34793415 |
Emiko Petrosky, Laura M Mercer Kollar, Megan C Kearns, Sharon G Smith, Carter J Betz, Katherine A Fowler, Delight E Satter.
Abstract
PROBLEM/CONDITION: Homicide is a leading cause of death for American Indians/Alaska Natives (AI/ANs). Intimate partner violence (IPV) contributes to many homicides, particularly among AI/AN females. This report summarizes data from CDC's National Violent Death Reporting System (NVDRS) on AI/AN homicides. Results include victim and suspect sex, age group, and race/ethnicity; method of injury; type of location where the homicide occurred; precipitating circumstances (i.e., events that contributed to the homicide); and other selected characteristics. PERIOD COVERED: 2003-2018. DESCRIPTION OF SYSTEM: NVDRS collects data regarding violent deaths obtained from death certificates, coroner/medical examiner reports, and law enforcement reports and links related deaths (e.g., multiple homicides and homicide followed by suicide) into a single incident. This report includes data on AI/AN homicides that were collected from 34 states (Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, California, Colorado, Georgia, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Utah, Virginia, Washington, and Wisconsin) and the District of Columbia.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34793415 PMCID: PMC8639023 DOI: 10.15585/mmwr.ss7008a1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: MMWR Surveill Summ ISSN: 1545-8636
Number and percentage of American Indian/Alaska Native homicides, by victim’s sex and selected demographic and incident characteristics — National Violent Death Reporting System,* 2003–2018
| Characteristic | Male
(n = 1,681) | Female
(n = 545) | Total
(n = 2,226) |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||
| <1 | 36 (2.1) | 22 (4.0) |
|
| 1–9 | 51 (3.0) | 49 (9.0) |
|
| 10–17 | 52 (3.1) | 20 (3.7) |
|
| 18–24 | 327 (19.5) | 95 (17.4) |
|
| 25–34 | 486 (28.9) | 127 (23.3) |
|
| 35–44 | 317 (18.9) | 109 (20.0) |
|
| 45–54 | 240 (14.3) | 57 (10.5) |
|
| 55–64 | 103 (6.1) | 41 (7.5) |
|
| ≥65 | 69 (4.1) | 25 (4.6) |
|
|
| |||
| Hispanic or Latino | 112 (6.7) | 37 (6.8) |
|
|
| |||
| < High school graduate or GED certificate equivalent | 470 (30.5) | 118 (26.0) |
|
| High school graduate or GED certificate equivalent | 553 (35.9) | 148 (32.6) |
|
| Some college or more | 200 (13.0) | 93 (20.5) |
|
| Unknown | 319 (20.7) | 95 (20.9) |
|
|
| |||
| Pregnant or ≤6 weeks postpartum | — | 13 (14.8) |
|
|
| |||
| Metropolitan resident | 788 (48.4) | 256 (47.8) |
|
| Metropolitan injury location | 755 (53.3) | 232 (50.8) |
|
|
| |||
| Firearm | 865 (51.5) | 213 (39.1) |
|
| Sharp instrument | 368 (21.9) | 99 (18.2) |
|
| Blunt instrument | 142 (8.4) | 66 (12.1) |
|
| Personal weapons (e.g., hands, feet, or fists) | 145 (8.6) | 61 (11.2) |
|
| Hanging/strangulation/suffocation | 37 (2.2) | 35 (6.4) |
|
| Other method†† | 67 (4.0) | 44 (8.1) |
|
| Unknown | 57 (3.4) | 27 (5.0) |
|
|
| |||
| House/apartment | 902 (53.7) | 337 (61.8) |
|
| Street/highway | 273 (16.2) | 39 (7.2) |
|
| Natural area | 90 (5.4) | 49 (9.0) |
|
| Motor vehicle | 71 (4.2) | 25 (4.6) |
|
| Parking lot/public garage/public transport | 53 (3.2) | 9 (1.7) |
|
| Other location§§ | 209 (12.4) | 53 (9.7) |
|
| Unknown | 83 (4.9) | 33 (6.1) |
|
|
| |||
| Victim’s home | 488 (29.0) | 260 (47.7) |
|
Abbreviation: GED = general education development.
* NVDRS data have been collected in Maryland, Massachusetts, New Jersey, Oregon, South Carolina, and Virginia since 2003; Alaska, Colorado, Georgia, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Rhode Island, and Wisconsin since 2004; Kentucky, New Mexico, and Utah since 2005; Ohio since 2011; Michigan since 2014; Arizona, Connecticut, Hawaii, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Maine, Minnesota, New Hampshire, New York, Pennsylvania, Vermont, and Washington since 2015; and Alabama, California, Delaware, District of Columbia, Louisiana, Missouri, Nebraska, Nevada, and West Virginia since 2017. Three states reported data on a subset of counties that represented at least 80% of violent deaths in their state during 2016–2018 (Illinois and Pennsylvania) and 2016–2017 (Washington). California reported 2017 data from four counties (Los Angeles, Sacramento, Shasta, and Siskiyou) and 2018 data from 21 counties (Amador, Butte, Fresno, Humboldt, Imperial, Kern, Kings, Lake, Los Angeles, Marin, Mono, Placer, Sacramento, San Benito, San Diego, San Francisco, San Mateo, Shasta, Siskiyou, Ventura, Yolo). Hawaii provided data only for 2015–2016 because of lack of complete data in other years. † Percentages might not total 100% due to rounding. § Percentage is based on the number of homicide decedents aged ≥18 (n = 1,996; 1,542 males and 454 females). ¶ Percentage is based on the number of female decedents of reproductive age (15–44 years) with known pregnancy status (n = 88). ** Percentages are based on the number of homicide decedents with a known residence (n = 2,164 [97.2%]; 1,628 males [96.8%] and 536 females [98.3%]) and injury location (n = 1,874 [84.2%]; 1,417 males [84.3%] and 457 females [83.9%]). Zip Code Rural-Urban Commuting Area (RUCA) codes (2010) were used to determine whether decedents resided in nonmetropolitan versus metropolitan areas. RUCA codes measure daily commuting flows, population density, and urbanization levels to classify subcounty level geographic areas. Victim residential Zip codes were dichotomized as “metro” (RUCA codes 1–3) and “nonmetro” (RUCA codes 4–10). Descriptions of the RUCA classification codes 1–10 are available at https://www.ers.usda.gov/data-products/rural-urban-commuting-area-codes/documentation. †† Other method includes (in descending order): motor vehicles (e.g., buses, motorcycles, other transport vehicles), fire/burns, drowning, fall, poisoning, intentional neglect, and other (single method). §§ Other location includes (in descending order): commercial/retail area, hotel/motel, park/playground/sports or athletic area, bar/nightclub, jail/prison, abandoned house/building/warehouse, synagogue/church/temple, hospital or medical facility, office building, industrial or construction area, farm, preschool/school/college/school bus, bridge, supervised residential facility, railroad tracks, and other unspecified location.
Number and percentage of American Indian/Alaska Native homicides, by victim’s sex, selected demographics of homicide suspects, and the victim’s relationship to the suspect — National Violent Death Reporting System,* 2003–2018
| Characteristic | Male
(n = 1,364) | Female
(n = 479) | Total
(n = 1,843) |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||
| <18 | 72 (5.3) | 10 (2.1) |
|
| 18–24 | 284 (20.8) | 86 (18.0) |
|
| 25–34 | 276 (20.2) | 122 (25.5) |
|
| 35–44 | 151 (11.1) | 83 (17.3) |
|
| 45–54 | 93 (6.8) | 47 (9.8) |
|
| 55–64 | 33 (2.4) | 12 (2.5) |
|
| ≥65 | 9 (<1.0) | 5 (1.0) |
|
| Unknown | 446 (32.7) | 114 (23.8) |
|
|
| |||
| Male | 1,090 (79.9) | 386 (80.6) |
|
| Female | 135 (9.9) | 62 (12.9) |
|
| Unknown | 139 (10.2) | 31 (6.5) |
|
|
| |||
| AI/AN | 429 (31.5) | 162 (33.8) |
|
| Not AI/AN | 527 (38.6) | 203 (42.4) |
|
| White, non-Hispanic | 264 (50.1) | 114 (56.2) |
|
| Black, non-Hispanic | 160 (30.4) | 47 (23.2) |
|
| Hispanic or Latino, any race except AI/AN | 90 (17.1) | 29 (14.3) |
|
| Asian/Pacific Islander, non-Hispanic | 13 (2.5) | 13 (6.4) |
|
| Unknown, non-Hispanic | 408 (29.9) | 114 (23.8) |
|
|
| |||
| Acquaintance/friend | 359 (26.3) | 55 (11.5) |
|
| Spouse/intimate partner (current or former) | 71 (5.2) | 184 (38.4) |
|
| Other person, known to victim | 168 (12.3) | 38 (7.9) |
|
| Other relative | 143 (10.5) | 34 (7.1) |
|
| Stranger | 122 (8.9) | 22 (4.6) |
|
| Child | 60 (4.4) | 30 (6.3) |
|
| Other relationship¶ | 83 (6.1) | 39 (8.1) |
|
| Unknown | 358 (26.2) | 77 (16.1) |
|
Abbreviation: AI/AN = American Indian Alaska Native.
* NVDRS data have been collected in Maryland, Massachusetts, New Jersey, Oregon, South Carolina, and Virginia since 2003; Alaska, Colorado, Georgia, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Rhode Island, and Wisconsin since 2004; Kentucky, New Mexico, and Utah since 2005; Ohio since 2011; Michigan since 2014; Arizona, Connecticut, Hawaii, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Maine, Minnesota, New Hampshire, New York, Pennsylvania, Vermont, and Washington since 2015; and Alabama, California, Delaware, District of Columbia, Louisiana, Missouri, Nebraska, Nevada, and West Virginia since 2017. Three states reported data on a subset of counties that represented at least 80% of violent deaths in their state during 2016–2018 (Illinois and Pennsylvania) and 2016–2017 (Washington). California reported 2017 data from four counties (Los Angeles, Sacramento, Shasta, and Siskiyou) and 2018 data from 21 counties (Amador, Butte, Fresno, Humboldt, Imperial, Kern, Kings, Lake, Los Angeles, Marin, Mono, Placer, Sacramento, San Benito, San Diego, San Francisco, San Mateo, Shasta, Siskiyou, Ventura, Yolo). Hawaii provided data for 2015–2016 because of lack of complete data in other years. † Percentages might not total 100% due to rounding and are based on the number of homicide decedents with a known suspect (n = 1,843 [82.8%]; 1,364 males [81.1%] and 479 females [87.9%]). § The following sentence can be used as a general guide for interpreting victim-suspect relationship: “The victim is the ____________ of the suspect.” For example, when a parent kills a child, the relationship is “Child” not “Parent” (“The victim is the child of the suspect”). The sentence is a general guide and some relationships might not be captured by this sentence (e.g., other person known to victim or victim was law enforcement officer killed in the line of duty). ¶ Other relationship includes (in descending order): parent, child of suspect’s boyfriend/girlfriend (e.g., child killed by mother’s boyfriend), rival gang member, intimate partner of suspect's parent (e.g., teenager kills his mother’s boyfriend), and victim was a law enforcement officer injured in the line of duty.
Number and percentage of American Indian/Alaska Native homicides, by victim’s sex and circumstance of the homicide — National Violent Death Reporting System,* 2003–2018
| Circumstance† | Male | Female | Total |
|---|---|---|---|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |||
| Substance use problem (excluding alcohol) | 183 (17.6) | 64 (18.4) | 247 (17.8) |
| Alcohol problem | 159 (15.3) | 36 (10.4) | 195 (14.1) |
| Current diagnosed mental health problem | 43 (4.1) | 17 (4.9) | 60 (4.3) |
| History of ever being treated for a mental health problem | 35 (3.4) | 14 (4.0) | 49 (3.5) |
| Current mental health treatment | 19 (1.8) | 6 (1.7) | 25 (1.8) |
| Current depressed mood | 10 (<1.0) | 6 (1.7) | 16 (1.2) |
| Other addiction (e.g., gambling or sex) | 3 (<1.0) | 1 (<1.0) | 4 (<1.0) |
|
| |||
| Intimate partner violence–related | 167 (12.1) | 211 (45.0) | 378 (20.4) |
| Family relationship problem¶ | 97 (9.3) | 26 (7.5) | 123 (8.9) |
| Other relationship problem (nonintimate) | 123 (8.9) | 22 (4.7) | 145 (7.8) |
| Jealousy | 55 (4.0) | 30 (6.4) | 85 (4.6) |
| Victim of interpersonal violence during past month | 18 (1.7) | 32 (9.2) | 50 (3.6) |
| Perpetrator of interpersonal violence during past month | 32 (3.1) | 4 (1.2) | 36 (2.6) |
|
| |||
| Argument or conflict | 757 (54.7) | 175 (37.3) | 932 (50.3) |
| Physical fight (two persons, not a brawl)** | 204 (27.7) | 28 (10.9) | 232 (23.3) |
| Crisis during previous or upcoming 2 weeks | 85 (6.1) | 36 (7.7) | 121 (6.5) |
| History of child abuse/neglect | 10 (1.4) | 6 (2.3) | 16 (1.6) |
|
| |||
| Precipitated by another crime | 346 (25.0) | 109 (23.2) | 455 (24.6) |
| Crime in progress†† | 228 (65.9) | 75 (68.8) | 303 (66.6) |
| Drug involvement | 157 (11.3) | 45 (9.6) | 202 (10.9) |
| Gang related | 89 (6.4) | 12 (2.6) | 101 (5.5) |
| Terrorist attack | 0 (0.0) | 0 (0.0) | 0 (0.0) |
|
| |||
| Victim used a weapon | 115 (8.3) | 5 (1.1) | 120 (6.5) |
| Caretaker abuse/neglect led to death** | 28 (3.8) | 34 (13.2) | 62 (6.2) |
| Brawl | 63 (4.6) | 7 (1.5) | 70 (3.8) |
| Random violence¶ | 35 (3.4) | 7 (2.0) | 42 (3.0) |
| Justifiable self-defense | 55 (4.0) | 0 (0.0) | 55 (3.0) |
| Drive-by shooting¶ | 33 (3.2) | 8 (2.3) | 41 (3.0) |
| Mentally ill suspect§§ | 26 (1.9) | 19 (4.0) | 45 (2.4) |
| Walk-by assault** | 19 (2.6) | 3 (1.2) | 22 (2.2) |
| Victim was a bystander | 23 (1.7) | 13 (2.8) | 36 (1.9) |
| Victim was an intervener assisting a crime victim | 15 (1.1) | 7 (1.5) | 22 (1.2) |
| Victim was a police officer on duty | 5 (<1.0) | 0 (0.0) | 5 (<1.0) |
| Stalking** | 0 (0.0) | 1 (<1.0) | 1 (<1.0) |
| Prostitution** | 0 (0.0) | 1 (<1.0) | 1 (<1.0) |
| Hate crime | 1 (<1.0) | 0 (0.0) | 1 (<1.0) |
| Mercy killing | 0 (0.0) | 0 (0.0) | 0 (0.0) |
* NVDRS data have been collected in Maryland, Massachusetts, New Jersey, Oregon, South Carolina, and Virginia since 2003; Alaska, Colorado, Georgia, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Rhode Island, and Wisconsin since 2004; Kentucky, New Mexico, and Utah since 2005; Ohio since 2011; Michigan since 2014; Arizona, Connecticut, Hawaii, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Maine, Minnesota, New Hampshire, New York, Pennsylvania, Vermont, and Washington since 2015; and Alabama, California, Delaware, District of Columbia, Louisiana, Missouri, Nebraska, Nevada, and West Virginia since 2017. Three states reported data on a subset of counties that represented at least 80% of violent deaths in their state during 2016–2018 (Illinois and Pennsylvania) and 2016–2017 (Washington). California reported 2017 data from four counties (Los Angeles, Sacramento, Shasta, and Siskiyou) and 2018 data from 21 counties (Amador, Butte, Fresno, Humboldt, Imperial, Kern, Kings, Lake, Los Angeles, Marin, Mono, Placer, Sacramento, San Benito, San Diego, San Francisco, San Mateo, Shasta, Siskiyou, Ventura, Yolo). Hawaii provided data only for 2015–2016 because of lack of complete data in other years. † Includes homicides with one or more circumstances. Total numbers do not equal the sums of the columns because more than one circumstance could have been present per decedent. § Percentage is based on the number of homicide decedents with known circumstances. ¶ Variable collected for homicides since 2009. Denominator is homicides with known circumstances during 2009–2018 (n = 1,385; 1,038 males and 347 females). ** Variable collected for homicides since 2013. Denominator is homicides with known circumstances during 2013–2018 (n = 995; 737 males and 258 females). †† Denominator includes those decedents involved in an incident that was precipitated by another crime. §§ Percentage is based on the number of homicide decedents with a known suspect (n = 1,843 [82.8%]; 1,364 males [81.1%] and 479 females [87.9%]).
Number and percentage of American Indian/Alaska Native intimate partner violence-related homicides,* by victim’s sex and selected demographic and incident characteristics — National Violent Death Reporting System,† 2003–2018
| Characteristic | Male
(n = 167) | Female
(n = 213) | Total
(n = 380) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age group (yrs) | |||
| <1 | 0 (0.0) | 1 (<1.0) |
|
| 1–9 | 6 (3.6) | 9 (4.2) |
|
| 10–17 | 3 (1.8) | 4 (1.9) |
|
| 18–24 | 27 (16.2) | 37 (17.4) |
|
| 25–34 | 50 (29.9) | 49 (23.0) |
|
| 35–44 | 35 (21.0) | 63 (29.6) |
|
| 45–54 | 28 (16.8) | 32 (15.0) |
|
| 55–64 | 10 (6.0) | 14 (6.6) |
|
| ≥65 | 8 (4.8) | 4 (1.9) |
|
|
| |||
| Hispanic or Latino | 9 (5.4) | 11 (5.2) |
|
|
| |||
| < High school graduate or GED certificate equivalent | 37 (23.4) | 43 (21.6) |
|
| High school graduate or GED certificate equivalent | 60 (38.0) | 59 (29.6) |
|
| Some college or more | 23 (14.6) | 49 (24.6) |
|
| Unknown | 38 (24.1) | 48 (24.1) |
|
|
| |||
| Pregnant or ≤6 weeks postpartum | — | 6 (14.3) | — |
|
| |||
| Metropolitan resident | 71 (43.6) | 95 (45.0) |
|
| Metropolitan injury location | 63 (44.1) | 90 (47.6) |
|
|
| |||
| Firearm | 77 (46.1) | 85 (39.9) |
|
| Sharp instrument | 56 (33.5) | 36 (16.9) |
|
| Personal weapons (e.g., hands, feet, or fists) | 12 (7.2) | 29 (13.6) |
|
| Blunt instrument | 10 (6.0) | 25 (11.7) |
|
| Hanging/strangulation/suffocation | 4 (2.4) | 21 (9.9) |
|
| Other method§§ | 7 (4.2) | 11 (5.2) |
|
| Unknown | 1 (<1.0) | 6 (2.8) |
|
|
| |||
| House/apartment | 129 (77.2) | 147 (69.0) |
|
| Street/highway | 20 (12.0) | 14 (6.6) |
|
| Natural area | 4 (2.4) | 13 (6.1) |
|
| Other location¶¶ | 13 (7.8) | 35 (16.4) |
|
| Unknown | 1 (<1.0) | 4 (1.9) |
|
|
| |||
| Victim’s home | 79 (47.3) | 124 (58.2) |
|
Abbreviation: GED = general education development.
* Includes victims killed by an intimate partner (e.g., current, former, or unspecified spouse, boyfriend, or girlfriend), victims killed during an intimate partner violence-related homicide who were not the intimate partner of the suspect (e.g., family, friends, and others who might have intervened in intimate partner violence, such as first responders or bystanders), and homicides precipitated by jealousy or distress over an intimate partner’s relationship or suspected relationship with another person. † NVDRS data have been collected in Maryland, Massachusetts, New Jersey, Oregon, South Carolina, and Virginia since 2003; Alaska, Colorado, Georgia, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Rhode Island, and Wisconsin since 2004; Kentucky, New Mexico, and Utah since 2005; Ohio since 2011; Michigan since 2014; Arizona, Connecticut, Hawaii, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Maine, Minnesota, New Hampshire, New York, Pennsylvania, Vermont, and Washington since 2015; and Alabama, California, Delaware, District of Columbia, Louisiana, Missouri, Nebraska, Nevada, and West Virginia since 2017. Three states reported data on a subset of counties that represented at least 80% of violent deaths in their state during 2016–2018 (Illinois and Pennsylvania) and 2016–2017 (Washington). California reported 2017 data from four counties (Los Angeles, Sacramento, Shasta, and Siskiyou) and 2018 data from 21 counties (Amador, Butte, Fresno, Humboldt, Imperial, Kern, Kings, Lake, Los Angeles, Marin, Mono, Placer, Sacramento, San Benito, San Diego, San Francisco, San Mateo, Shasta, Siskiyou, Ventura, Yolo). Hawaii provided data only for 2015–2016 because of lack of complete data in other years. § Percentages might not total 100% due to rounding. ¶ Percentage is based on the number of intimate partner violence-related homicide decedents aged ≥18 years (n = 357; 158 males and 199 females). ** Percentage is based on the number of intimate partner violence-related female decedents of reproductive age (15–44 years) with known pregnancy status (n = 42). †† Percentages are based on the number of homicide decedents with a known residence (n = 374 [98.4%]; 163 males [97.6%] and 211 females [99.1%]) and injury location (n = 332 [87.4%]; 143 males [85.6%] and 189 females [88.7%]). Zip Code Rural-Urban Commuting Area (RUCA) codes (2010) were used to determine whether decedents lived in nonmetropolitan versus metropolitan areas. RUCA codes measure daily commuting flows, population density, and urbanization levels to classify sub-county level geographic areas. Victim residential Zip codes were dichotomized as “metro” (RUCA codes 1–3) and “nonmetro” (RUCA codes 4–10). Descriptions of the RUCA classification codes 1–10 are available at https://www.ers.usda.gov/data-products/rural-urban-commuting-area-codes/documentation. §§ Other method includes (in descending order): motor vehicles (e.g., buses, motorcycles, other transport vehicles), fire/burns, poisoning, fall, and other (single method). ¶¶ Other location includes (in descending order): hotel/motel, motor vehicle, parking lot/public garage/public transport, park/playground/sports or athletic area, commercial/retail area, synagogue/church/temple, hospital or medical facility, office building, and other unspecified location.
Number and percentage of American Indian/Alaska Native intimate partner violence-related homicides,* by victim’s sex, selected characteristics of homicide suspects, and the victim’s relationship to the suspect — National Violent Death Reporting System,† 2003–2018
| Characteristic | Male
(n = 165) | Female
(n = 211) | Total
(n = 376) |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||
| <18 | 5 (3.0) | 2 (<1.0) |
|
| 18–24 | 19 (11.5) | 31 (14.7) |
|
| 25–34 | 49 (29.7) | 47 (22.3) |
|
| 35–44 | 25 (15.2) | 51 (24.2) |
|
| 45–54 | 21 (12.7) | 33 (15.6) |
|
| 55–64 | 3 (1.8) | 11 (5.2) |
|
| ≥65 | 2 (1.2) | 4 (1.9) |
|
| Unknown | 41 (24.8) | 32 (15.2) |
|
|
| |||
| Male | 95 (57.6) | 202 (95.7) |
|
| Female | 67 (40.6) | 8 (3.8) |
|
| Unknown | 3 (1.8) | 1 (<1.0) |
|
|
| |||
| AI/AN | 63 (38.2) | 70 (33.2) |
|
| Not AI/AN | 69 (41.8) | 111 (52.6) |
|
| White, non-Hispanic | 55 (79.7) | 62 (55.9) |
|
| Black, non-Hispanic | 6 (8.7) | 24 (21.6) |
|
| Hispanic or Latino, any race except AI/AN | 7 (10.1) | 16 (14.4) |
|
| Asian/Pacific Islander, non-Hispanic | 1 (1.4) | 9 (8.1) |
|
| Unknown, non-Hispanic | 33 (20.0) | 30 (14.2) |
|
|
| |||
| Intimate partner | 71 (43.0) | 184 (87.2) |
|
| Current intimate partner | 62 (37.6) | 152 (72.0) |
|
| Former intimate partner | 7 (4.2) | 21 (10.0) |
|
| Intimate partner, unknown whether current or former | 2 (1.2) | 11 (5.2) |
|
| Nonintimate partner (i.e., corollary victims) | 85 (51.5) | 23 (10.9) |
|
| Acquaintance/friend | 36 (21.8) | 7 (3.3) |
|
| Other person, known to victim | 19 (11.5) | 7 (3.3) |
|
| Other relationship** | 30 (18.2) | 9 (4.3) |
|
| Unknown | 9 (5.5) | 4 (1.9) |
|
Abbreviation: AI/AN = American Indian Alaska Native.
*Includes victims killed by an intimate partner (e.g., current, former, or unspecified spouse, boyfriend, or girlfriend), victims killed during an intimate partner violence-related homicide who were not the intimate partner of the suspect (e.g., family, friends, and others who might have intervened in intimate partner violence, such as first responders or bystanders), and homicides precipitated by jealousy or distress over an intimate partner’s relationship or suspected relationship with another person. † NVDRS data have been collected in Maryland, Massachusetts, New Jersey, Oregon, South Carolina, and Virginia since 2003; Alaska, Colorado, Georgia, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Rhode Island, and Wisconsin since 2004; Kentucky, New Mexico, and Utah since 2005; Ohio since 2011; Michigan since 2014; Arizona, Connecticut, Hawaii, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Maine, Minnesota, New Hampshire, New York, Pennsylvania, Vermont, and Washington since 2015; and Alabama, California, Delaware, District of Columbia, Louisiana, Missouri, Nebraska, Nevada, and West Virginia since 2017. Three states reported data on a subset of counties that represented at least 80% of violent deaths in their state during 2016–2018 (Illinois and Pennsylvania) and 2016–2017 (Washington). California reported 2017 data from four counties (Los Angeles, Sacramento, Shasta, and Siskiyou) and 2018 data from 21 counties (Amador, Butte, Fresno, Humboldt, Imperial, Kern, Kings, Lake, Los Angeles, Marin, Mono, Placer, Sacramento, San Benito, San Diego, San Francisco, San Mateo, Shasta, Siskiyou, Ventura, Yolo). Hawaii provided data for 2015–2016 because of lack of complete data in other years. § Percentages might not total 100% due to rounding and are based on the number of intimate partner violence-related homicide decedents with a known suspect (n = 376 [98.9%]; 165 males [98.8%] and 211 females [99.1%]). ¶ The following sentence can be used as a general guide for interpreting victim-suspect relationship: “The victim is the ____________ of the suspect.” For example, when a parent kills a child, the relationship is “Child” not “Parent” (“The victim is the child of the suspect”). The sentence is a general guide and some relationships might not be captured by this sentence (e.g., other person known to victim or victim was a law enforcement officer killed in the line of duty). ** Other relationship includes (in descending order): other relative, child, child of suspect's boyfriend/girlfriend (e.g., child killed by mother's boyfriend), stranger, parent, and intimate partner of suspect's parent (e.g., teenager kills his mother’s boyfriend).
Number and percentage of American Indian/Alaska Native intimate partner violence-related homicides,* by victim’s sex and circumstance — National Violent Death Reporting System,† 2003–2018
| Circumstance§ | Male | Female | Total |
|---|---|---|---|
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| Substance use problem (excluding alcohol) | 20 (18.2) | 22 (15.2) |
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| Alcohol problem | 19 (17.3) | 22 (15.2) |
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| Current diagnosed mental health problem | 2 (1.8) | 9 (6.2) |
|
| History of ever being treated for a mental health problem | 1 (<1.0) | 7 (4.8) |
|
| Current depressed mood | 2 (1.8) | 4 (2.8) |
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| Current mental health treatment | 0 (0.0) | 4 (2.8) |
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| Other addiction (e.g., gambling or sex) | 0 (0.0) | 0 (0.0) |
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| Jealousy | 51 (30.5) | 29 (13.7) |
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| Victim of interpersonal violence during past month | 5 (4.5) | 23 (15.9) |
|
| Other relationship problem (nonintimate) | 10 (6.0) | 6 (2.8) |
|
| Perpetrator of interpersonal violence during past month | 8 (7.3) | 2 (1.4) |
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| Family relationship problem** | 7 (6.4) | 1 (<1.0) |
|
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| |||
| Argument or conflict | 82 (49.1) | 91 (43.1) |
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| Physical fight (two persons, not a brawl)†† | 26 (34.2) | 11 (11.2) |
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| Crisis during previous or upcoming 2 weeks | 9 (5.4) | 16 (7.6) |
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| History of child abuse/neglect | 0 (0.0) | 0 (0.0) |
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| Precipitated by another crime | 32 (19.2) | 26 (12.3) |
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| Crime in progress§§ | 16 (50.0) | 17 (65.4) |
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| Drug involvement | 11 (6.6) | 8 (3.8) |
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| Gang related | 5 (3.0) | 2 (<1.0) |
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| Terrorist attack | 0 (0.0) | 0 (0.0) |
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| |||
| Caretaker abuse/neglect led to death†† | 1 (1.3) | 7 (7.1) |
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| Justifiable self-defense | 12 (7.2) | 0 (0.0) |
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| Victim used a weapon | 9 (5.4) | 0 (0.0) |
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| Mentally ill suspect¶¶ | 3 (1.8) | 4 (1.9) |
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| Brawl | 5 (3.0) | 1 (<1.0) |
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| Victim was an intervener assisting a crime victim | 2 (1.2) | 2 (<1.0) |
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| Victim was a bystander | 1 (<1.0) | 2 (<1.0) |
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| Drive-by shooting** | 2 (1.8) | 0 (0.0) |
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| Walk-by assault†† | 0 (0.0) | 1 (1.0) |
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| Stalking†† | 0 (0.0) | 1 (1.0) |
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| Victim was a police officer on duty | 0 (0.0) | 0 (0.0) |
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| Mercy killing | 0 (0.0) | 0 (0.0) |
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| Hate crime | 0 (0.0) | 0 (0.0) |
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| Random violence** | 0 (0.0) | 0 (0.0) |
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| Prostitution†† | 0 (0.0) | 0 (0.0) |
|
* Includes victims killed by an intimate partner (e.g., current, former, or unspecified spouse, boyfriend, or girlfriend), victims killed during an intimate partner violence-related homicide who were not the intimate partner of the suspect (e.g., family, friends, and others who might have intervened in intimate partner violence, such as first responders or bystanders), and homicides precipitated by jealousy or distress over an intimate partner’s relationship or suspected relationship with another person. † NVDRS data have been collected in Maryland, Massachusetts, New Jersey, Oregon, South Carolina, and Virginia since 2003; Alaska, Colorado, Georgia, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Rhode Island, and Wisconsin since 2004; Kentucky, New Mexico, and Utah since 2005; Ohio since 2011; Michigan since 2014; Arizona, Connecticut, Hawaii, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Maine, Minnesota, New Hampshire, New York, Pennsylvania, Vermont, and Washington since 2015; and Alabama, California, Delaware, District of Columbia, Louisiana, Missouri, Nebraska, Nevada, and West Virginia since 2017. Three states reported data on a subset of counties that represented at least 80% of violent deaths in their state during 2016–2018 (Illinois and Pennsylvania) and 2016–2017 (Washington). California reported 2017 data from four counties (Los Angeles, Sacramento, Shasta, and Siskiyou) and 2018 data from 21 counties (Amador, Butte, Fresno, Humboldt, Imperial, Kern, Kings, Lake, Los Angeles, Marin, Mono, Placer, Sacramento, San Benito, San Diego, San Francisco, San Mateo, Shasta, Siskiyou, Ventura, Yolo). Hawaii provided data only for 2015–2016 because of lack of complete data in other years. § Includes intimate partner violence-related homicides with one or more circumstances. Total numbers do not equal the sums of the columns because more than one circumstance could have been present per decedent. ¶ Percentage is based on the number of intimate partner violence–related homicides with known circumstances. ** Variable collected for intimate partner violence-related homicides since 2009. Denominator is intimate partner violence-related homicides with known circumstances during 2009-2018 (n = 255; 110 males and 145 females). †† Variable collected for homicides since 2013. Denominator is homicides with known circumstances during 2013–2018 (n = 174; 76 males and 98 females). §§ Denominator includes those decedents involved in an incident that was precipitated by another crime. ¶¶ Percentage is based on the number of intimate partner violence-related homicide decedents with a known suspect (n = 376 [98.9%]; 165 males [98.8%] and 211 females [99.1%]).