NCJ Number
237680
Editor(s)
Kevin Smith
Date Published
January 2012
Length
118 pages
Annotation
Police statistics for England and Wales for 2010/11 are reported for homicides and offenses involving the use of firearms, as well as data from a self-report survey of respondents between the ages of 16 and 59 regarding their experiences of domestic abuse, sexual assault, and stalking.
Abstract
This report is the second in a series of supplementary volumes that accompany the main annual Home Office Statistical Bulletin, "Crime in England and Wales 2010/11." The supplementary volumes report on additional analysis not included in the main annual publication. The data on homicide include the method of killing, the relationship between the victim and suspect, age and gender, the demographic characteristics of victims and suspects, as well as case outcomes. A total of 636 deaths were recorded as homicides in England and Wales between April 2010 and March 2011, an increase of 28 homicides compared with the 608 recorded in 2009/10 (a 5-percent increase). The most common method of killing continues to be by sharp instrument; there were 60 shooting homicide victims, an increase of 19 offenses compared with the 41 in 2009/10. Female victims were more likely than male victims to be killed by someone they knew. A statistical interpretation of homicide trends is provided. The chapter on recorded offenses that involved the use of firearms provides further analysis of the provisional data published in the annual bulletin. Analyses address the type of firearms used in the offenses, how the firearms were used, the type of crime in which firearms were used, and the injuries sustained by the victims. The geographical distribution of firearms offenses is reported, and data indicate victims' ages, and the use of any stolen firearms. The survey report on intimate violence addresses its prevalence and the characteristics of partner abuse. Extensive tables and figures and a bibliography