Abstract
Stranger rape cases are one of the most difficult sexual assault crimes to solve for law enforcement. This study aimed to compare crime-scene characteristics between serial rapists and single-victim rapists in stranger rape cases and build a predictive model to predict rapist type. An archival database of released sex offenders included 385 who committed stranger rapes. Of those, 244 were single-victim rapists and 141 were serial rapists. The single-victim rapists were significantly more likely to have violently themed crime-scene characteristics than serial rapists, whereas serial rapists were significantly more likely than single-victim rapists to engage in criminally sophisticated behavior and induce participation from their victims. A logistic regression using 10 crime-scene characteristics correctly identified 75.8% of cases as perpetrated by either single-victim or serial rapists. The most significant predictors of rapist type were whether the offender digitally penetrated their victim, whether the offender choked their victim, whether they were at a new/unknown location or whether they threatened their victim. The implications of these results are that they benefit law enforcement in the investigation of stranger rape cases by potentially narrowing down their suspect pool and add to the classification of stranger rapists in offender profiling literature.
Highlights
Sexual violence is a serious public health concern in the United States
A significant difference between the marital status of serial rapists and single-victim rapists was found with single-victim rapists tending to have never married, whereas serial rapists tended to be divorced more than single-victim rapists
We found that stranger rapes by single-victim rapists and serial rapists can be differentiated from each other based upon the behavior offenders display during the commission of rape crime in three general categories: violence, criminal sophistication and interpersonal behavior
Summary
Sexual violence is a serious public health concern in the United States. One in every six American women has been the victim of attempted or completed rape in her lifetime (Department of Justice, 2018). There appears to be a substantial need to better understand those who commit sexual assault. This will allow us to increase apprehension rates. If a link can be established between a crime and its offender through other means, such as by looking at the offender’s crime-scene behavior, it can be valuable to an investigation by narrowing down the pool of potential suspects. This method is known as “offender profiling”
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More From: International Journal of Police Science & Management
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