Literature DB >> 9608692

Criminal multilation of the human body in Sweden--a thirty-year medico-legal and forensic psychiatric study.

J Rajs1, M Lundström, M Broberg, L Lidberg, O Lindquist.   

Abstract

During the 30-year period 1961-1990, a total of 22 deaths with criminal multilation/dismemberment of the human body were registered in Sweden. The multilations occurred in time clusters, mostly during the summer and winter periods, and increased during the three decades, with incidence rates of 0.05, 0.1, and 0.125 per million inhabitants and year, respectively. Multilation was noted 6.6 times more often in large urban areas than in the rest of Sweden. Defensive mutilation, in order to get rid of the corpse or make its identity more difficult, was noted in ten instances, aggressive mutilation following outrageous overkilling in four, offensive mutilation (lust murder) in seven, and necromanic multilation in one instance. In the last-mentioned case the cause of death was natural, while all deaths in the first three groups were homicidal, or homicide was strongly suspected. All perpetrators were males, in six instances assisted by other persons. In more than half of the cases the perpetrator's occupation was associated with application of anatomical knowledge, e.g., butcher, physician, veterinary assistant, or hunter. The perpetrators of the defensive and aggressive mutilations were mostly disorganized, i.e., alcoholics or drug users with previous psychiatric contacts and criminal histories, while the lust murderers were mostly organized, with a history of violent crimes (including the "serial killing" type), drug abuse and mental disorders with anxiety and schizophrenia, in that order to a diminishing degree. There were differences in mode of mutilation, depending on whether the mutilation was carried out by a layman, a butcher, or a physician. In only one case was the perpetrator convicted for the mutilation act itself; in the remaining instances the manslaughter, as a more serious crime, assimilated the mutilation. When the mutilation made it impossible to establish the cause of death, the perpetrators, despite strong circumstantial evidence indicating murder, were acquitted.

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Year:  1998        PMID: 9608692

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Forensic Sci        ISSN: 0022-1198            Impact factor:   1.832


  4 in total

1.  Homicide and concealment of the corpse. Autopsy case series and review of the literature.

Authors:  Maria De Matteis; Arianna Giorgetti; Guido Viel; Chiara Giraudo; Claudio Terranova; Amalia Lupi; Paolo Fais; Alessandra Puggioni; Giovanni Cecchetto; Massimo Montisci
Journal:  Int J Legal Med       Date:  2020-05-30       Impact factor: 2.686

2.  Analysis of false start bone lesions produced by an electrical oscillating autopsy saw.

Authors:  Caroline Bernardi; Luísa Nogueira; Véronique Alunni; Gérald Quatrehomme
Journal:  Int J Legal Med       Date:  2019-02-13       Impact factor: 2.686

Review 3.  The Role of Forensic Investigation in an Unusual Case of Patricide by a Schizophrenic Woman Involving Dismemberment of a Decomposed Body.

Authors:  Isabella Aquila; Matteo Antonio Sacco; Fabrizio Cordasco; Carmen Scalise; Francesco Maria Galassi; Elena Varotto; Walter Caruso; Valerio Riccardo Aquila; Pietrantonio Ricci
Journal:  Diagnostics (Basel)       Date:  2022-06-29

4.  The Psychology of Murder Concealment Acts.

Authors:  Mohammad Rahim Kamaluddin; Naji Arafat Mahat; Geshina Ayu Mat Saat; Azizah Othman; Ian Lloyd Anthony; Sowmya Kumar; Suzaily Wahab; Saravanan Meyappan; Balan Rathakrishnan; Fauziah Ibrahim
Journal:  Int J Environ Res Public Health       Date:  2021-03-18       Impact factor: 3.390

  4 in total

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