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When Men Murder Women: New Report Details Homicide Rates
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The Violence Policy Center has just released a horrifying report detailing the rate of female homicides perpetrated by men in 2006 (the most recent year data was available). The study, based on Supplementary Homicide Report (SHR) data submitted to the FBI, analyzes incidences of murder involving one female victim and one male perpetrator. The data is broken down by state, race and ethnicity, murder weapon, relationship between the victim and offender, and the circumstances leading up to the murder.
The report's key findings:
An analysis of the rate of homicide by race found that black women were murdered at 3 times the rate of white women. The circumstances leading up to black female homicide largely mirrored that of all female homicides:
Compared to a black man, a black woman is far more likely to be killed by her spouse, an intimate acquaintance, or a family member than by a stranger. Where the relationship could be determined, 90 percent of black females killed by males in single victim/single offender incidents knew their killers (428 of 475).
[ ... ]
As with female homicide victims in general, firearms -- especially handguns -- were the most common weapons used by males to murder black females in 2006.
Other races and ethnicities were also disproportionately affected. "American Indian and Alaskan Native women (1.33 per 100,000) were more likely than white women to be murdered by a male offender ... " Meanwhile, " ... Asian and Pacific Islander women were the least likely (0.52 per 100,000) women of any race to be murdered by a male offender. Unfortunately, Hispanic ethnicity could not be determined on a national level because of the inadequacy of data collection and reporting."
The report also ranked female homicides by state:
Nevada ranked first as the state with the highest homicide rate among female victims killed by male offenders in single victim/single offender incidents. Its rate of 3.27 per 100,000 was more than two and one half times the national average. Nevada was followed by South Carolina (2.84 per 100,000) and Alabama (2.20 per 100,000).