|
The Attorney General of Washington
published a case management on May 13, 1997 for Missing Children
and Homicide Investigations with these findings:
The study examined more than
600 child abduction-murder cases from 44 states.
Summary of Findings:
In 53 % of the cases the
victim and abductor were strangers. This relationship, where the
murderer is a stranger to the victim, "defines" this particular
type of murder. The data also suggest there may be a grater predisposition
to serial offending among child abduction killers.
The typical victims were
white females, about 11 years old, often described as "normal
kids" from middle class neighborhoods with stable family relationships.
9% of the victims were 5
years of age or younger.
In 58% of the cases, the
initial contact site between victim and abductor was within a quarter
mile of the victim's home. In 33% of the cases, first contact was
less than 200 feet from the victim's home.
The typical abductors were
white males, about 27 years old, unmarried, with prior arrests for
violence in 60% of the cases, and, in 53% of the cases, with prior
crimes against children.
Contrary to popular belief,
child abduction killers are not truly "loners." Only 17%
lived alone, while 83% lived with someone else and 34% lived with
parents.
The primary motivation for
these murders was sexual assault. 60% of the killers had prior arrests
for violent crimes. The majority, 53%, had committed prior crimes
against children, the most common being sexual assault.
57% were simply "victims
of opportunity." The most common basic elements in these crimes
are: a motivated offender, the opportunity to commit the crime,
and ineffective guardians.
In almost 2/3 of the cases
the abductions were "snatch and grab" confrontations where
the predators saw an available victim then quickly assaulted and
subdued them.
Timing in reporting missing
children is critical. It should be done immediately. In 60% of the
cases there were delays of over 2 hours between the time the victim
was known to be missing and a report was made to law enforcement
authorities. In 74% of the cases the victims were dead within 3
hours after abduction.
Police response upon receiving
such a report should also be immediate. Police need to concentrate
as many investigative resources as quickly as possible on these
cases. This may enhance the odds that a child is recovered alive
and will certainly improve the probability that the predator is
caught.
Since the victims' last known
locations were usually very close to the site of initial contact
with their abductors, the need for a neighborhood canvass may be
among the biggest issues uncovered in this research. When police
did not know the initial contact site, the solvability rate dropped
40% below average. When the initial contact site was known, the
solvability rate increased by 13% above average.
The neighborhood canvass
should not only ask the question, "What did you see that was
unusual?", but should also ask, "What did you see that
was usual?" In the cases examined by this study, the killer
was in the area on initial contact two-thirds of the time because
he belonged there. He lived in the area 29% of the time; 19% were
there for some normal social activity, and 18% either worked in
the area or were there on other business.
After the crime, key behaviors
by the killer are most common and most telling. 21% left town, 18%
confided in someone about their involvement, and 10% actually interjected
themselves into the murder investigation in some way.
|