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Journal Article

Citation

Felson RB, Messner SF. Criminology 1996; 34(4): 519-545.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1996, American Society of Criminology)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

This research explores the utility of the notion of lethal intent for understanding the outcomes of injurious attacks. We suggest that assailants sometimes kill rather than merely injure victims to avoid either retaliation or criminal prosecution. We hypothesize that, for these tactical reasons, offenders will be more likely to kill when they have no accomplices, when their victims are male or black, and when. the victim can identify them. These hypotheses are tested with a merged data set containing information on homicides and nonlethal victimizations involving robbery, rape, and pure assault. The results of multiple logistic regression analyses are largely consistent with theoretical expectations.

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