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. 2004 Mar 27;328(7442):734–737. doi: 10.1136/bmj.328.7442.734

Mental illness in people who kill strangers: longitudinal study and national clinical survey

Jenny Shaw 1, Tim Amos 1, Isabelle M Hunt 1, Sandra Flynn 1, Pauline Turnbull 1, Navneet Kapur 1, Louis Appleby 1
PMCID: PMC381321  PMID: 15044289

Abstract

Objectives To establish changes over time in the frequency of homicides committed by strangers, and to describe the personal and clinical characteristics of perpetrators of stranger homicides.

Design Longitudinal study and national clinical survey.

Participants People convicted of homicide in England and Wales between 1996 and 1999 and whether the victim was known to the perpetrator.

Setting England and Wales.

Main outcome measure Characteristics of perpetrators of homicides according to whether victims were strangers or not.

Results Stranger homicides increased between 1967 and 1997, both in number and as a proportion of all homicides. No increase was found, however, in the number of perpetrators placed under a hospital order after homicide, whether all homicides or stranger homicides only. 358 of 1594 (22%) homicides were stranger homicides. In these cases the perpetrator was more likely to be male and young. The method of killing was more likely to be by hitting, kicking, or pushing (36% (130 of 358) for victims who were strangers to the perpetrator compared with 14% (145 of 1074) for victims who were known). Perpetrators were less likely to have a history of mental disorder (34%, n = 80 ν 50%, n = 142), a history of contact with mental health services (16%, 37 of 234 ν 24%, 200 of 824), and psychiatric symptoms at the time of the offence (6%, n = 14 ν 18%, n = 143). They were more likely to have a history of drug misuse (47%, n = 93 ν 37%, n = 272); alcohol (56%, n = 94 ν 41%, n = 285) or drugs (24% n = 44 ν 12%, n = 86) were more likely to have contributed to the offence.

Conclusions Stranger homicides have increased, but the increase is not the result of homicides by mentally ill people and therefore the “care in the community” policy. Stranger homicides are more likely to be related to alcohol or drug misuse by young men.

Introduction

In the past 30 years the annual number of convictions for homicide in England and Wales has risen substantially.1 In the same period the number of mental hospital beds has more than halved, and several cases of homicide by mentally ill people have been reported as failures of community care.2-4 As a result, public fear of being a random victim of violence by people with mental illness living in the community seems to have increased.5,6 We examined changes over time in the proportion of homicides in England and Wales that are committed by people unknown to the victims (stranger homicides) and the personal and clinical characteristics of recent stranger homicides, including mental illness and contact with mental health services.

Methods

The Home Office receives information on homicides (murder, manslaughter, infanticide) from all police forces in England and Wales and produces the homicide index from which annual figures are published.1 The index includes information on the relationship between perpetrators and victims and whether perpetrators were placed under a hospital order after conviction, indicating the presence of mental disorder.

Stranger homicides are those in which perpetrators and victims are unknown to each other. A broader definition, however, is used in the analysis of figures before 1977; this includes those in which the relationship between perpetrator and victim was not established, the assumption being that they did not know each other. In most stranger homicides, both perpetrator and victim are members of the public, but the figures also include cases in which individuals are killed in the course of employment (for example, police officers) and contract or terrorist killings.

Study design

Longitudinal study

Data were obtained from the homicide index for 1967-97. This includes number of convictions for homicide, number of stranger homicides (by the broader definition), and number of hospital orders.

Cross sectional study

The National Confidential Inquiry into Suicide and Homicide by People with Mental Illness has received information from the homicide index since 1996. A full account of the inquiry's methods is given elsewhere.7

We recorded the details of all individuals convicted of homicide in England and Wales during the three years from April 1996. These included personal characteristics of perpetrators and victims and details of the offence, prior convictions, and sentencing. Psychiatric reports were requested from the courts of trial, the Prison Service, the Crown Prosecution Service, and other sources. From these we extracted personal characteristics; clinical history; mental state at the time of the offence; history of alcohol or drug dependence and misuse, and the role these substances played in the offence; and contact with mental health services.

Using χ2 tests we compared stranger homicides (excluding being killed in the course of employment) with those in which perpetrators were known to victims. We compared criminological, personal, and clinical variables. If information on a variable was not known for an individual case we omitted this case from the analysis of that variable.

Results

The number of homicides in England and Wales almost doubled between 1967 and 1997 (table 1). The number of stranger homicides increased threefold to fourfold. As a proportion of all homicides, stranger homicides increased around twofold (χ2 = 43.8, df 1, P < 0.001). The number of hospital orders increased neither in total nor in stranger homicides alone. The proportion of homicides leading to a hospital order decreased.

Table 1.

Homicides leading to conviction in England and Wales 1967-97. Values are numbers (percentages) unless stated otherwise

Year No of homicides Stranger homicides Non-stranger homicides Hospital order Stranger homicides and hospital order
1967 354 33 (9) 321 (91)
1968 360 48 (13) 312 (87)
1969 332 36 (11) 296 (89) 37 (11)
1970 339 46 (14) 293 (86) 41 (12)
1971 407 60 (15) 347 (85) 44 (11)
1972 409 73 (18) 336 (82) 47 (12)
1973 391 66 (17) 325 (83) 40 (10)
1974 526 62 (12) 464 (88) 35 (7)
1975 443 84 (19) 359 (81) 34 (8)
1976 488 88 (18) 400 (82) 32 (7)
1977 418 78 (19) 340 (81) 36 (9) 6 (8)
1978 471 86 (18) 385 (82) 27 (6) 1 (1)
1979 546 103 (19) 443 (81) 28 (5) 1 (1)
1980 549 153 (28) 396 (72) 41 (8) 11 (7)
1981 499 81 (16) 418 (84) 42 (8) 1 (1)
1982 557 78 (14) 479 (86) 37 (7) 4 (5)
1983 482 73 (15) 409 (85) 37 (8) 4 (5)
1984 537 63 (12) 474 (88) 41 (8) 3 (5)
1985 536 88 (16) 448 (84) 36 (7) 9 (10)
1986 563 131 (23) 432 (77) 35 (6) 2 (2)
1987 599 146 (24) 453 (76) 46 (8) 13 (9)
1988 547 127 (23) 420 (77) 42 (8) 8 (6)
1989 521 102 (20) 419 (80) 34 (7) 6 (6)
1990 555 92 (17) 463 (83) 40 (7) 7 (8)
1991 623 121 (19) 502 (81) 36 (6) 3 (2)
1992 581 101 (17) 480 (83) 39 (7) 5 (5)
1993 566 126 (22) 440 (78) 38 (7) 7 (6)
1994 623 132 (21) 491 (79) 40 (6) 5 (4)
1995 663 147 (22) 516 (78) 34 (5) 8 (5)
1996 585 144 (25) 441 (75) 32 (6) 5 (3)
1997 618 125 (20) 493 (80) 31 (5) 5 (4)

In the three year study period, 1594 homicides in the general population were reported to the inquiry. In 358 (22%) cases the victim was a stranger to the perpetrator. The relationship between perpetrator and victim was unknown in 202 cases. Forty people were killed in the course of their employment.

Perpetrators were predominately young men, particularly in stranger homicides (table 2). Such homicides were more likely to be the result of hitting, kicking, or pushing, indicating physical fights. The perpetrators were less likely to receive a verdict of manslaughter on the grounds of diminished responsibility or to be placed on a hospital order.

Table 2.

Offence characteristics of perpetrators of homicides in England and Wales, 1996-9, and relationship to victim. Values are numbers (percentages) unless stated otherwise

Characteristic Stranger (n=358) Known (n=1074) P value
Perpetrator
Male 353 (99) 925 (86) <0.001
Age 18-30 245 (68) 505 (47) <0.001
>1 victim 8 (2) 37 (3) 0.26
Victim
Male 312 (87) 683 (64) <0.001
Age <30 140 (39) 461 (43) 0.021
Method of killing
Blunt instrument 46 (13) 147 (14) 0.66
Sharp instrument 116 (32) 425 (40) 0.01
Hitting, kicking, or pushing 130 (36) 145 (14) <0.001
Strangulation or suffocation 19 (5) 130 (12) <0.001
Shooting 22 (6) 46 (4) 0.15
Other 24 (7) 165 (15) <0.001
Outcome
Murder 207 (58) 485 (45) <0.001
Manslaughter:
Diminished responsibility 13 (4) 131 (12) <0.001
Other* 136 (38) 435 (41) 0.400
Infanticide 0 (0) 12 (1) <0.05
Unfit to plead 2 (1) 5 (0.5) 0.56
Insane 0 (0) 6 (1) 0.18
Disposal
Prison 346 (97) 922 (86) <0.001
Hospital 10 (3) 88 (8) 0.001
Other 2 (1) 59 (5) 0.001

Denominators may vary owing to missing data.

*

Includes provocation and self defence.

Mainly probation.

Psychiatric reports were obtained in 1168 (73%) cases, including 234 (65% of 358) stranger homicides. In stranger homicides, perpetrators were more likely to have a history of drug misuse, and alcohol and drugs were more likely to have contributed to the offence (table 3). They were less likely to have a lifetime history of mental disorder, symptoms of mental illness at the time of the offence, or previous contact with mental health services.

Table 3.

Characteristics of perpetrators of homicides in England and Wales, 1996-9, and relationship to victim. Values are numbers (percentages) unless stated otherwise

Characteristics Stranger (n=234) Known (n=824) P value
Social and personal
Male 231 (99) 695 (84) <0.001
Median age (range) 23 (12-55) 30 (13-77) <0.001
Ethnic minority 31 (14) 104 (13) 0.821
Not currently married 153 (75) 431 (56) <0.001
Unemployed 128 (62) 402 (54) 0.023
Living alone 23 (14) 112 (16) 0.46
Homeless or no fixed abode 7 (4) 18 (2) 0.33
Clinical
History of alcohol misuse 77 (40) 301 (42) 0.75
Alcohol thought to have contributed to offence 94 (56) 285 (41) 0.001
History of drug misuse 93 (47) 272 (37) 0.008
Drugs thought to have contributed to offence 44 (24) 86 (12) <0.001
History of alcohol or drug misuse 124 (53) 436 (53) 0.98
Alcohol or drugs thought to have contributed to offence 104 (54) 311 (42) 0.003
Mental disorder
Primary diagnosis (lifetime):
Schizophrenia 10 (5) 64 (8) 0.09
Affective disorders 9 (4) 107 (13) <0.001
Alcohol dependence 6 (3) 64 (8) 0.007
Drug dependence 18 (9) 41 (5) 0.08
Personality disorder 23 (11) 77 (10) 0.66
Other 8 (4) 39 (5) 0.46
Symptoms of mental illness at time of homicide 14 (6) 143 (18) <0.001
Service contact
Contact with psychiatric services
Any (lifetime) 37 (16) 200 (24) 0.006
In past year 20 (8) 106 (13) 0.63

Denominators may vary owing to missing data.

Of the 37 perpetrators of stranger homicides who had ever been in contact with mental health services, 10 had received a diagnosis of schizophrenia. Of these, eight had been in contact with services in the year before the homicide, two in the previous week.

Discussion

Homicides by strangers have increased more than homicides by people known to their victims, although they remain a minority of all homicides. Being placed under a hospital order has not, however, increased, suggesting that the increase in stranger homicides is not the result of homicides by people with mental illness and therefore the policy of “care in the community.” Almost all are committed by young men, and the victims are usually male. Most seem to occur as a result of physical fights or attacks. In stranger homicides, perpetrators are less likely to have a mental illness or to have been under mental health care, contrary to popular fears.

Out findings can be criticised on the basis that both the longitudinal and the cross sectional studies omit homicides that do not lead to conviction, in which homicides by strangers may be over-represented. The cross sectional study was based in part on psychiatric reports prepared for the courts, and these were not available in one third of cases. The loss of these reports is likely to have inflated the proportion of perpetrators with mental illness because reports identifying mental illness are more likely to have been used in court proceedings and retained in court files. A similar proportion of reports was, however, obtained for both stranger and non-stranger homicides, so the values relating to mental illness may be inflated in both groups.

The results of the longitudinal study are consistent with previous studies on the rate of probable mental illness in people convicted of homicide.5 Our findings suggest that stranger homicide is more often associated with alcohol and drug misuse than with severe mental illness. This is also true of non-stranger homicides. In our sample there were 85 perpetrators of homicide with schizophrenia over three years; 12 killed a stranger and eight of these people had been in contact with mental health services in the 12 months before the homicide. In contrast, of 560 perpetrators with a history of alcohol or drug misuse, 124 killed a stranger.

Failings in mental health care have contributed to individual cases, and steps should be taken to prevent this. For example, mental health services should work to prevent the loss of contact and non-compliance with treatment that frequently precede homicide by people with severe mental illness.7,8 Stranger homicides are, however, more often committed by young men under the influence of alcohol or drugs, and a public health approach to homicide prevention should place greater emphasis on reducing alcohol and drug misuse in this group.

What is already known on this topic

The number of convictions for homicide has increased in the past 30 years

In that time the number of mental hospital beds has been reduced by more than half, as part of “care in the community”

What this study adds

Perpetrators of stranger homicide are less likely to have a mental illness or to have been under mental health care than perpetrators of homicides in general

Stranger homicides are most commonly committed by young men and the victims are usually men

Stranger homicides are more likely to occur as a result of physical fights or attacks

Perpetrators of stranger homicides are most often under the influence of alcohol or drugs

Funding: The National Confidential Inquiry into Suicide and Homicide by People with Mental Illness is funded by the National Institute for Clinical Excellence.

Contributors: JS, TA, and LA contributed to the design, data collection, data analysis, and drafting the paper. JS and LA are grant holders on the project. IH, SF, PT, and NK contributed to data collection and analysis and drafting the paper. JS will act as guarantor for the paper. The guarantor accepts full responsibility for the conduct of the study, had access to the data, and controlled the decision to publish.

Competing interests: LA is currently seconded part time to the Department of Health as National Director for Mental Health and in this capacity provides advice on mental health policy.

Ethical approval: This study was approved by the multi-centre research ethics committee.

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