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Many serial murder cases involve offenders who work or live in isolation. Despite the societal consequences of these cases, they have received little attention from law enforcement. The emergence of "prevalence" studies, which examine whether and where incidents of a certain type of crime appear in a geographic area or subpopulation, provide a way of investigating these contexts. Three high-incidence sites of childhood murder (murders of 10 or more victims) were selected: San Francisco County (California), Staunton (Virginia), and New York City. As part of the distributional studies of child homicides and the first step in showing that the locations of poor children were often statistically similar to those of the more affluent, the authors conducted further research to determine whether these places were relatively more or less prone to incidents of murder. and neighborhoods surrounding the three sites were examined with a database of all homicides committed in the city of that site in 1980 (N=64,818 for NYC), in 1990 (N=271,673), and in 2000 (N=341,870) for comparison. For San Francisco, and in both 1990 and 2000, the neighborhoods surrounding the sites of homicide incidence were those with the highest number of high-risk children.
This investigation measured whether the likelihood of arrest for homicide depends on the seriousness of the offense and the race of the victim. There is a published record of criminal convictions of homicide offenders in the United States from 1973-1982 (N=375,962). The study used the "revised offense" scale, that is, arrest records for the homicide offense and information on the offense seriousness and race of the victim. In addition, the analysis controlled for race, sex, and age of offender and the state of victim's residence. Results indicated no evidence of racial discrimination in the arrest of homicide offenders. Victim severity and offender ethnicity did not appear to bias the decisions of investigative officers as to the location of the arrest. d2c66b5586