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Journal Article

Citation

Behnken MP, Caudill JW, Berg MT, Trulson CR, DeLisi M. J. Crim. Justice 2011; 39(6): 471-478.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2011, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.jcrimjus.2011.09.001

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

AbstractBackground
Although prior criminal record and concurrent criminal charges constitute the main eligibility and aggravating circumstances used in capital sentencing, relatively little research has examined the criminal careers of offenders who are ultimately sentenced to death.
Materials and Methods
Using official criminal history data for 618 incarcerated male homicide offenders selected from 8 states--191 of whom were sentenced to death--the current study explored the criminal careers of offenders that received the most severe legal punishment.
Results
Poisson regression incidence rate ratio models indicated that multiple measures of prior criminal activity including contemporaneous and prior history of violence, prior incarceration, early onset of arrest, juvenile homicide offending, and juvenile child molestation were associated with subsequently being sentenced to death. Separate models for white, African American, and Hispanic males showed contrasting effects in their criminal careers and varying relationships between prior criminal career and current capital offending.
Conclusion
The current study adds to the literature on lifespan criminality by applying Poisson regression analyses and a criminal careers approach to study the most extreme offenders including those sentenced to death.

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