NCJ Number
157474
Journal
Crime and Delinquency Volume: 41 Issue: 4 Dated: special issue (October 1995) Pages: 467-480
Date Published
1995
Length
14 pages
Annotation
This study examined how an abusive husband's mental state, antagonism between the husband and wife, and the wife's injuries affect police officers' inferences and referral decisions regarding victim shelters and mental health services.
Abstract
Police officers (n=257) were drawn from public safety training centers responsible for providing in-service training to experienced officers and mandatory training for rookie officers in the north Georgia area. Most officers were male (88.7 percent) and white (70 percent). Using a 2x2x3 between subjects design, the study manipulated three features of the script: victim's injury, antagonism between the disputants, and the husband's mental state (normal, hallucinations, drunken) to produce 12 scripts. Respondents were individually randomly assigned to read only one of the 12 scripts; they answered closed-ended questions that assessed the mediating inferences related to their decisions. The findings show that the presence of injury to the victim and the husband's mental illness influenced a number of inferences about the husband; the most important inferences were his credibility and responsibility for the violence, which were crucial predictors of officers' referral decisions. Officers focused less on assessing the fault of the victim and more on substantiating claims and determining the risk of future violence. Alcohol use by the husband or antagonism between the disputants did not affect officers' inferences or referral decisions. Findings suggest that officers are reluctant to refer victims to shelters despite the presence of moderate injuries. 5 tables, 8 notes, and 16 references