Likelihood of Arrest for Robberies, Assaults, and Sexual Offenses Committed by Group and Lone Offenders

Many criminologists have considered the role of groups in the commission of crime to gain insight into offender decision-making. Additional research is needed, however, that examines the likelihood of arrest as a function of whether an offense is committed by a group of offenders (two or more offend...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of interpersonal violence 2021-10, Vol.36 (19-20), p.NP10106-NP10131
Hauptverfasser: Terranova, Victoria A., Vandiver, Donna M., Stafford, Mark C.
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container_end_page NP10131
container_issue 19-20
container_start_page NP10106
container_title Journal of interpersonal violence
container_volume 36
creator Terranova, Victoria A.
Vandiver, Donna M.
Stafford, Mark C.
description Many criminologists have considered the role of groups in the commission of crime to gain insight into offender decision-making. Additional research is needed, however, that examines the likelihood of arrest as a function of whether an offense is committed by a group of offenders (two or more offenders in a criminal incident) or a lone offender, as well as the number of offenders in the group. Using 3 years of data from the National Incident-Based Reporting System for robbery incidents, assault incidents, and sexual offenses, the study finds that the relative likelihood of arrest for group-offender incidents, compared with lone-offender incidents, varies by incident type. For robbery incidents, the likelihood of arrest increases when committed by a group of offenders. Yet, for assault incidents and sexual offenses, the likelihood of arrest decreases when committed by a group of offenders. Further analysis looks more closely at incidents committed by a group of offenders and how the number of offenders in the group affects the likelihood of arrest. A consistent finding is that for each incident type, the likelihood that all offenders in a group will be arrested is lower as the number of offenders increases, which may justify offenders’ perceptions of “safety in larger numbers.”
doi_str_mv 10.1177/0886260519872308
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source SAGE Complete; Sociological Abstracts
subjects Arrests
Criminology
Decision making
Offenders
Offenses
Robbery
Sex crimes
Sex offenders
title Likelihood of Arrest for Robberies, Assaults, and Sexual Offenses Committed by Group and Lone Offenders
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