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Murder

Murder is the unlawful killing of another human without justification or valid excuse, especially the unlawful killing of another human with malice aforethought.[1][2][3] This state of mind may, depending upon the jurisdiction, distinguish murder from other forms of unlawful homicide, such as manslaughter. Manslaughter is killing committed in the absence of malice,[note 1] brought about by reasonable provocation, or diminished capacity. Involuntary manslaughter, where it is recognized, is a killing that lacks all but the most attenuated guilty intent, recklessness.

Murder in the House by Jakub Schikaneder

Most societies consider murder to be an extremely serious crime, and thus that a person convicted of murder should receive harsh punishments for the purposes of retribution, deterrence, rehabilitation, or incapacitation. In most countries, a person convicted of murder generally faces a long-term prison sentence, a life sentence, or capital punishment.[4]

Etymology

The modern English word "murder" descends from the Proto-Indo-European *mŕ̥-trom which meant "killing", a noun derived from *mer- "to die".[5]

Proto-Germanic in fact had two nouns derived from this word, later merging into the modern English noun: *murþrą "death, killing, murder" (directly from Proto-Indo-European*mŕ̥-trom), whence Old English morðor "secret or unlawful killing of a person, murder; mortal sin, crime; punishment, torment, misery";[6] and *murþrijô "murderer; homicide" (from the verb *murþrijaną "to murder"), giving Old English myrþra "homicide, murder; murderer". There was a third word for "murder" in Proto-Germanic, continuing Proto-Indo-European *mr̥tós "dead" (compare Latin mors), giving Proto-Germanic *murþą "death, killing, murder" and Old English morþ "death, crime, murder" (compare German Mord).

The -d- first attested in Middle English mordre, mourdre, murder, murdre could have been influenced by Old French murdre, itself derived from the Germanic noun via Frankish *murþra (compare Old High German murdreo, murdiro), though the same sound development can be seen with burden (from burthen). The alternative murther (attested up to the 19th century) springs directly from the Old English forms. Middle English mordre is a verb from Anglo-Saxon myrðrian from Proto-Germanic *murþrijaną, or, according to the Oxford English Dictionary, from the noun.[7]

Use of the term

In many countries, in news reports, out of concern for being accused of defamation,[8] journalists are generally careful not to identify a suspect as a murderer until the suspect is convicted of murder in a court of law. After arrest, for example, journalists may instead write that the person was "arrested on suspicion of murder",[9] or, after a prosecutor files charges, as an "accused murderer".[10]

Opponents of abortion consider abortion a form of murder.[11][12] In some countries, a fetus is a legal person who can be murdered, and killing a pregnant woman is considered a double homicide.[13][14]

Definition

The eighteenth-century English jurist William Blackstone (citing Edward Coke), in his Commentaries on the Laws of England set out the common law definition of murder, which by this definition occurs

when a person, of sound memory and discretion, unlawfully kills any reasonable creature in being and under the king's peace, with malice aforethought, either express or implied.[15]

The elements of common law murder are:

  • unlawful
  • killing
  • through criminal act or omission
  • of a human
  • by another human
  • with malice aforethought.[16]
  • Unlawful – This distinguishes murder from killings that are done within the boundaries of law, such as capital punishment, justified self-defense, or the killing of enemy combatants by lawful combatants as well as causing collateral damage to non-combatants during a war.[17]
  • Killing – At common law life ended with cardiopulmonary arrest[16] – the total and irreversible cessation of blood circulation and respiration.[16] With advances in medical technology courts have adopted irreversible cessation of all brain function as marking the end of life.[16]
  • Criminal act or omission – Killing can be committed by an act or an omission.[18]
  • Of a human – This element presents the issue of when life begins. At common law, a fetus was not a human being.[19] Life began when the fetus passed through the vagina and took its first breath.[16]
  • By another human – In early common law, suicide was considered murder.[16] The requirement that the person killed be someone other than the perpetrator excluded suicide from the definition of murder.
  • With malice aforethought – Originally malice aforethought carried its everyday meaning – a deliberate and premeditated (prior intent) killing of another motivated by ill will. Murder necessarily required that an appreciable time pass between the formation and execution of the intent to kill. The courts broadened the scope of murder by eliminating the requirement of actual premeditation and deliberation as well as true malice. All that was required for malice aforethought to exist is that the perpetrator act with one of the four states of mind that constitutes "malice".

The four states of mind recognized as constituting "malice" are:[20]

  1. Intent to kill,
  2. Intent to inflict grievous bodily harm short of death,
  3. Reckless indifference to an unjustifiably high risk to human life (sometimes described as an "abandoned and malignant heart"), or
  4. Intent to commit a dangerous felony (the "felony murder" doctrine).

Under state of mind (i), intent to kill, the deadly weapon rule applies. Thus, if the defendant intentionally uses a deadly weapon or instrument against the victim, such use authorizes a permissive inference of intent to kill. Examples of deadly weapons and instruments include but are not limited to guns, knives, deadly toxins or chemicals or gases and even vehicles when intentionally used to harm one or more victims.

Under state of mind (iii), an "abandoned and malignant heart", the killing must result from the defendant's conduct involving a reckless indifference to human life and a conscious disregard of an unreasonable risk of death or serious bodily injury. In Australian jurisdictions, the unreasonable risk must amount to a foreseen probability of death (or grievous bodily harm in most states), as opposed to possibility.[21]

Under state of mind (iv), the felony-murder doctrine, the felony committed must be an inherently dangerous felony, such as burglary, arson, rape, robbery or kidnapping. Importantly, the underlying felony cannot be a lesser included offense such as assault, otherwise all criminal homicides would be murder as all are felonies.

In Spanish criminal law, murder takes place when any of these requirements concur: Treachery (the use of means to avoid risk for the aggressor or to ensure that the crime goes unpunished), price or reward (financial gain) or viciousness (deliberately increasing the pain of the victim). After the last reform of the Spanish Criminal Code, in force since July 1, 2015, another circumstance that turns homicide into murder is the desire to facilitate the commission of another crime or to prevent it from being discovered.[22]

As with most legal terms, the precise definition of murder varies between jurisdictions and is usually codified in some form of legislation. Even when the legal distinction between murder and manslaughter is clear, it is not unknown for a jury to find a murder defendant guilty of the lesser offense. The jury might sympathize with the defendant (e.g. in a crime of passion, or in the case of a bullied victim who kills their tormentor), and the jury may wish to protect the defendant from a sentence of life imprisonment or execution.

Degrees of murder

Some jurisdictions divide murder by degrees. The distinction between first- and second-degree murder exists, for example, in Canadian murder law and U.S. murder law.

The most common division is between first- and second-degree murder. Generally, second-degree murder is common law murder, and first-degree is an aggravated form. The aggravating factors of first-degree murder depend on the jurisdiction, but may include a specific intent to kill, premeditation, or deliberation. In some, murders committed by acts such as strangulation, poisoning, or lying in wait are also treated as first-degree murder.[23] A few states in the U.S. further distinguish third-degree murder, but they differ significantly in which kinds of murders they classify as second-degree versus third-degree. For example, Minnesota defines third-degree murder as depraved-heart murder, whereas Florida defines third-degree murder as felony murder (except when the underlying felony is specifically listed in the definition of first-degree murder).[24][25]

Some jurisdictions also distinguish premeditated murder. This is the crime of wrongfully and intentionally causing the death of another human being (also known as murder) after rationally considering the timing or method of doing so, in order to either increase the likelihood of success, or to evade detection or apprehension.[26] State laws in the United States vary as to definitions of "premeditation". In some states, premeditation may be construed as taking place mere seconds before the murder. Premeditated murder is one of the most serious forms of homicide, and is punished more severely than manslaughter or other types of homicide, often with a life sentence without the possibility of parole, or in some countries, the death penalty. In the U.S, federal law (18 U.S.C. § 1111(a)) criminalizes premeditated murder, felony murder and second-degree murder committed under situations where federal jurisdiction applies.[27] In Canada, the criminal code classifies murder as either first- or second-degree. The former type of murder is often called premeditated murder, although premeditation is not the only way murder can be classified as first-degree.

Common law

According to Blackstone, English common law identified murder as a public wrong.[28] According to common law, murder is considered to be malum in se, that is, an act which is evil within itself. An act such as murder is wrong or evil by its very nature,[citation needed] and it is the very nature of the act which does not require any specific detailing or definition in the law to consider murder a crime.[29]

Some jurisdictions still take a common law view of murder. In such jurisdictions, what is considered to be murder is defined by precedent case law or previous decisions of the courts of law. However, although the common law is by nature flexible and adaptable, in the interests both of certainty and of securing convictions, most common law jurisdictions have codified their criminal law and now have statutory definitions of murder.

Exclusions

General

Although laws vary by country, there are circumstances of exclusion that are common in many legal systems.

  • The killing of enemy combatants who have not surrendered, when committed by lawful combatants in accordance with lawful orders in war, is generally not considered murder. Illicit killings within a war may constitute murder or homicidal war crimes; see Laws of war.
  • Self-defense: acting in self-defense or in defense of another person is generally accepted as legal justification for killing a person in situations that would otherwise have been murder. However, a self-defense killing might be considered manslaughter if the killer established control of the situation before the killing took place. In the case of self-defense, it is called a "justifiable homicide".[30]
  • Unlawful killings without malice or intent are considered manslaughter.
  • In many common law countries, provocation is a partial defense to a charge of murder which acts by converting what would otherwise have been murder into manslaughter (this is voluntary manslaughter, which is more severe than involuntary manslaughter).
  • Accidental killings are considered homicides. Depending on the circumstances, these may or may not be considered criminal offenses; they are often considered manslaughter.
  • Suicide does not constitute murder in most societies. Assisting a suicide, however, may be considered murder in some circumstances.

Specific to certain countries

  • Capital punishment: some countries practice the death penalty. Capital punishment may be ordered by a legitimate court of law as the result of a conviction in a criminal trial with due process for a serious crime. All member states of the Council of Europe are prohibited from using the death penalty.
  • Euthanasia, doctor-assisted suicide: the administration of lethal drugs by a doctor to a terminally ill patient, if the intention is solely to alleviate pain, in many jurisdictions it is seen as a special case (see the doctrine of double effect and the case of Dr John Bodkin Adams).[31]
  • Killing to prevent the theft of one's property may be legal, depending on the jurisdiction.[32][33] In 2013, a jury in south Texas acquitted a man who killed a sex worker who attempted to run away with his money.[34]
  • Killing an intruder who is found by an owner to be in the owner's home (having entered unlawfully): legal in most US states (see Castle doctrine).[35]
  • Killing to prevent specific forms of aggravated rape or sexual assault – killing of attacker by the potential victim or by witnesses to the scene; legal in parts of the US and in various other countries.[36]
  • In some countries, the killing of a woman or girl in specific circumstances (e.g., when she commits adultery and is killed by her husband or other family members, known as honor killing) is not considered murder.[37]
  • In the United States, in some states and in federal jurisdiction, a killing by a police officer is excluded from prosecution if the officer believes they are being threatened with deadly force by the victim. This may include such actions by the victim as reaching into a glove compartment or pocket for license and registration, if the officer thinks that the victim might be reaching for a gun.[38]

Victim

All jurisdictions require that the victim be a natural person; that is, a human being who was still alive before being murdered. In other words, under the law one cannot murder a corpse, a corporation, a non-human animal, or any other non-human organism such as a plant or bacterium.

California's murder statute, penal code section 187, expressly mentioned a fetus as being capable of being killed, and was interpreted by the Supreme Court of California in 1994 as not requiring any proof of the viability of the fetus as a prerequisite to a murder conviction.[39] This holding has two implications. Firstly, a defendant in California can be convicted of murder for killing a fetus which the mother herself could have terminated without committing a crime.[39] And secondly, as stated by Justice Stanley Mosk in his dissent, because women carrying nonviable fetuses may not be visibly pregnant, it may be possible for a defendant to be convicted of intentionally murdering a person they did not know existed.[39]

Mitigating circumstances

Some countries allow conditions that "affect the balance of the mind" to be regarded as mitigating circumstances. This means that a person may be found guilty of "manslaughter" on the basis of "diminished responsibility" rather than being found guilty of murder, if it can be proved that the killer was suffering from a condition that affected their judgment at the time. Depression, post-traumatic stress disorder and medication side-effects are examples of conditions that may be taken into account when assessing responsibility.

Insanity

Mental disorder may apply to a wide range of disorders including psychosis caused by schizophrenia and dementia, and excuse the person from the need to undergo the stress of a trial as to liability. Usually, sociopathy and other personality disorders are not legally considered insanity. In some jurisdictions, following the pre-trial hearing to determine the extent of the disorder, the defense of "not guilty by reason of insanity" may be used to get a not guilty verdict.[40] This defense has two elements:

  • That the defendant had a serious mental illness, disease, or defect
  • That the defendant's mental condition, at the time of the killing, rendered the perpetrator unable to determine right from wrong, or that what they were doing was wrong
 
Aaron Alexis holding a shotgun during his rampage

Under New York law, for example:

§ 40.15 Mental disease or defect. In any prosecution for an offense, it is an affirmative defence that when the defendant engaged in the proscribed conduct, he lacked criminal responsibility by reason of mental disease or defect. Such lack of criminal responsibility means that at the time of such conduct, as a result of mental disease or defect, he lacked substantial capacity to know or appreciate either: 1. The nature and consequences of such conduct; or 2. That such conduct was wrong.

— N.Y. Penal Law, § 40.15[41]

Under the French Penal Code:

Article 122-1

  • A person is not criminally liable who, when the act was committed, was suffering from a psychological or neuropsychological disorder which destroyed his discernment or his ability to control his actions.
  • A person who, at the time he acted, was suffering from a psychological or neuropsychological disorder which reduced his discernment or impeded his ability to control his actions, remains punishable; however, the court shall take this into account when it decides the penalty and determines its regime.
    — Penal Code §122-1 found at Legifrance web site

Those who successfully argue a defense based on a mental disorder are usually referred to mandatory clinical treatment until they are certified safe to be released back into the community, rather than prison.[42]

Postpartum depression

Postpartum depression (also known as post-natal depression) is recognized in some countries as a mitigating factor in cases of infanticide. According to Susan Friedman, "Two dozen nations have infanticide laws that decrease the penalty for mothers who kill their children of up to one year of age. The United States does not have such a law, but mentally ill mothers may plead not guilty by reason of insanity."[43] In the law of the Republic of Ireland, infanticide was made a separate crime from murder in 1949, applicable for the mother of a baby under one year old where "the balance of her mind was disturbed by reason of her not having fully recovered from the effect of giving birth to the child or by reason of the effect of lactation consequent upon the birth of the child".[44] Since independence, death sentences for murder in such cases had always been commuted;[45] the new act was intended "to eliminate all the terrible ritual of the black cap and the solemn words of the judge pronouncing sentence of death in those cases ... where it is clear to the Court and to everybody, except perhaps the unfortunate accused, that the sentence will never be carried out."[46] In Russia, murder of a newborn child by the mother has been a separate crime since 1996.[47]

Unintentional

For a killing to be considered murder in nine out of fifty states in the US, there normally needs to be an element of intent. A defendant may argue that they took precautions not to kill, that the death could not have been anticipated, or was unavoidable. As a general rule, manslaughter[48] constitutes reckless killing, but manslaughter also includes criminally negligent (i.e. grossly negligent) homicide.[49] Unintentional killing that results from an involuntary action generally cannot constitute murder.[50] After examining the evidence, a judge or jury (depending on the jurisdiction) would determine whether the killing was intentional or unintentional.

Diminished capacity

In jurisdictions using the Uniform Penal Code, such as California, diminished capacity may be a defense. For example, Dan White used this defense[51] to obtain a manslaughter conviction, instead of murder, in the assassination of Mayor George Moscone and Supervisor Harvey Milk. Afterward, California amended its penal code to provide "As a matter of public policy there shall be no defense of diminished capacity, diminished responsibility, or irresistible impulse in a criminal action...."[52]

Aggravating circumstances

Murder with specified aggravating circumstances is often punished more harshly. Depending on the jurisdiction, such circumstances may include:

  • Premeditation
  • Poisoning
  • Murder of a child
  • Multiple murders committed within the same transaction or scheme
  • Murder of a police officer,[53][54] judge, firefighter or witness to a crime[55]
  • Murder of a pregnant woman[56]
  • Crime committed for pay or other reward, such as contract killing[57]
  • Exceptional brutality or cruelty
  • Methods which are dangerous to the public[58] e.g. explosion, arson, shooting in a crowd etc.[59]
  • Murder for a political cause[53][60]
  • Murder committed in order to conceal another crime or facilitate its commission.[61]
  • Hate crimes, which occur when a perpetrator targets a victim because of their perceived membership in a certain social group.
  • Treachery (e.g. Heimtücke in German law)

In the United States and Canada, these murders are referred to as first-degree or aggravated murders.[62][63] Under English criminal law, murder always carries a mandatory life sentence, but is not classified into degrees. Penalties for murder committed under aggravating circumstances are often higher under English law than the 15-year minimum non-parole period that otherwise serves as a starting point for a murder committed by an adult.

Felony murder rule

A legal doctrine in some common law jurisdictions broadens the crime of murder: when an offender kills in the commission of a dangerous crime, (regardless of intent), he or she is guilty of murder. The felony murder rule is often justified by its supporters as a means of preventing dangerous felonies,[64] but the case of Ryan Holle[65] shows it can be used very widely.

Year-and-a-day rule

In some common law jurisdictions, a defendant accused of murder is not guilty if the victim survives for longer than one year and one day after the attack.[66] This reflects the likelihood that if the victim dies, other factors will have contributed to the cause of death, breaking the chain of causation; and also means that the responsible person does not have a charge of murder "hanging over their head indefinitely".[67] Subject to any statute of limitations, the accused could still be charged with an offense reflecting the seriousness of the initial assault.

With advances in modern medicine, most countries have abandoned a fixed time period and test causation on the facts of the case. This is known as "delayed death" and cases where this was applied or was attempted to be applied go back to at least 1966.[68]

In England and Wales, the "year-and-a-day rule" was abolished by the Law Reform (Year and a Day Rule) Act 1996. However, if death occurs three years or more after the original attack then prosecution can take place only with the attorney-general's approval.

In the United States, many jurisdictions have abolished the rule as well.[69][70] Abolition of the rule has been accomplished by enactment of statutory criminal codes, which had the effect of displacing the common-law definitions of crimes and corresponding defenses. In 2001 the Supreme Court of the United States held that retroactive application of a state supreme court decision abolishing the year-and-a-day rule did not violate the Ex Post Facto Clause of Article I of the United States Constitution.[71]

The potential effect of fully abolishing the rule can be seen in the case of 74-year-old William Barnes, charged with the murder of a Philadelphia police officer Walter T. Barclay Jr., who he had shot nearly 41 years previously. Barnes had served 16 years in prison for attempting to murder Barkley, but when the policeman died on August 19, 2007, this was alleged to be from complications of the wounds suffered from the shooting – and Barnes was charged with his murder. He was acquitted on May 24, 2010.[72]

Contributing factors

According to Peter Morall, the motivations for murder fit into the following 4 categories:[73]

  • Lust: The murderer seeks to kill rivals to obtain objects of their sexual desire
  • Love: The murderer seeks to "mercy kill" a loved one with a major deformity or an incurable illness.
  • Loathing: The murderer seeks to kill a loathed person (such as an abusive parent) or members of a loathed group or culture.
  • Loot: The murderer seeks some form of financial gain.

Morall argues that a motive alone is insufficient to explain criminal killing, as people can experience those impulse without killing. Morall insists risk factors that may increase the chance that somebody will commit a murder include:[73]

Certain personality disorders are associated with an increased homicide rate, most notably narcissistic, anti-social, and histrionic personality disorders and those associated with psychopathology.[74]

Some aspects of homicides, including the genetic relations or proximity between murderers and their victims, (as in the Cinderella effect), may potentially be explained by the evolution theory or evolutionary psychology.[75]

Several studies have shown that there is a correlation between murder rates and poverty.[76][77][78][79] A 2000 study showed that regions of the state of São Paulo in Brazil with lower income also had higher rates of murder.[79]

Religious attitudes

Abrahamic context

 
A group of Thugs strangling a traveller on a highway in the early 19th century.

In the Abrahamic religions, the first ever murder was committed by Cain against his brother Abel out of jealousy.[80] In the past, certain types of homicide were lawful and justified. Georg Oesterdiekhoff wrote:

Evans-Pritchard says about the Nuer from Sudan: "Homicide is not forbidden, and Nuer do not think it wrong to kill a man in fair fight. On the contrary, a man who slays another in combat is admired for his courage and skill." (Evans-Pritchard 1956: 195) This statement is true for most African tribes, for pre-modern Europeans, for Indigenous Australians, and for Native Americans, according to ethnographic reports from all over the world. ... Homicides rise to incredible numbers among headhunter cultures such as the Papua. When a boy is born, the father has to kill a man. He needs a name for his child and can receive it only by a man, he himself has murdered. When a man wants to marry, he must kill a man. When a man dies, his family again has to kill a man.[81]

In many such societies the redress was not via a legal system, but by blood revenge, although there might also be a form of payment that could be made instead—such as the weregild which in early Germanic society could be paid to the victim's family in lieu of their right of revenge.

One of the oldest-known prohibitions against murder appears in the Sumerian Code of Ur-Nammu written sometime between 2100 and 2050 BC. The code states, "If a man commits a murder, that man must be killed."

Judeo-Christian standard

In Judeo-Christian traditions, the prohibition against murder is one of the Ten Commandments given by God to Moses in (Exodus: 20v13) and (Deuteronomy 5v17). The Vulgate and subsequent early English translations of the Bible used the term secretly killeth his neighbour or smiteth his neighbour secretly rather than murder for the Latin clam percusserit proximum.[82][83] Later editions such as Young's Literal Translation and the World English Bible have translated the Latin occides simply as murder[84][85] rather than the alternatives of kill, assassinate, fall upon, or slay.

In Islam

In Islam according to the Qur'an, one of the greatest sins is to kill a human being who has committed no fault.[86]

"Do not take a ˹human˺ life—made sacred by Allah—except with ˹legal˺ right." [Quran 17:33]

"That is why We ordained for the Children of Israel that whoever takes a life—unless as a punishment for murder or mischief in the land—it will be as if they killed all of humanity; and whoever saves a life, it will be as if they saved all of humanity." [Quran 5:32]

"˹They are˺ those who do not invoke any other god besides Allah, nor take a ˹human˺ life—made sacred by Allah—except with ˹legal˺ right,1 nor commit fornication. And whoever does ˹any of˺ this will face the penalty." [Quran 25:68]

Historical attitudes

The term assassin derives from Hashshashin,[87] a militant Ismaili Shi'ite sect, active from the 8th to 14th centuries. This mystic secret society killed members of the Abbasid, Fatimid, Seljuq and Crusader elite for political and religious reasons.[88] The Thuggee cult that plagued India was devoted to Kali, the goddess of death and destruction.[89][90] According to some estimates the Thuggees murdered 1 million people between 1740 and 1840.[91] The Aztecs believed that without regular offerings of blood the sun god Huitzilopochtli would withdraw his support for them and destroy the world as they knew it.[92] According to Ross Hassig, author of Aztec Warfare, "between 10,000 and 80,400 persons" were sacrificed in the 1487 re-consecration of the Great Pyramid of Tenochtitlan.[93][94] Japanese samurai had the right to strike with their sword at anyone of a lower class who compromised their honour.[95]

Slavery

Southern slave codes did make willful killing of a slave illegal in most cases.[96] For example, the 1860 Mississippi case of Oliver v. State charged the defendant with murdering his own slave.[97] In 1811, the wealthy white planter Arthur Hodge was hanged for murdering several of his slaves on his plantation in the Virgin Islands.[98]

Honor killings in Corsica

In Corsica, vendetta was a social code that required Corsicans to kill anyone who wronged their family honor. Between 1821 and 1852, no fewer than 4,300 murders were perpetrated in Corsica.[99]

Incidence

 
International murder rate per 100,000 inhabitants, 2011
  0–1
  1–2
  2–5
  5–10
  10–20
  >20

The World Health Organization reported in October 2002 that a person is murdered every 60 seconds.[100] An estimated 520,000 people were murdered in 2000 around the globe. Another study estimated the worldwide murder rate at 456,300 in 2010 with a 35% increase since 1990.[101] Two-fifths of them were young people between the ages of 10 and 29 who were killed by other young people.[102] Because murder is the least likely crime to go unreported, statistics of murder are seen as a bellwether of overall crime rates.[103]

Murder rates vary greatly among countries and societies around the world. In the Western world, murder rates in most countries have declined significantly during the 20th century and are now between 1 and 4 cases per 100,000 people per year. Latin America and the Caribbean, the region with the highest murder rate in the world,[104] experienced more than 2.5 million murders between 2000 and 2017.[105]

 
UNODC : Per 100,000 population (2011)

Murder rates by varies countries

Murder rates in jurisdictions such as Japan, Singapore, Hong Kong, Iceland, Switzerland, Italy, Spain and Germany are among the lowest in the world, around 0.3–1 cases per 100,000 people per year; the rate of the United States is among the highest of developed countries, around 4.5 in 2014,[106] with rates in larger cities sometimes over 40 per 100,000.[107] The top ten highest murder rates are in Honduras (91.6 per 100,000), El Salvador, Ivory Coast, Venezuela, Belize, Jamaica, U.S. Virgin Islands, Guatemala, Saint Kitts and Nevis and Zambia. (UNODC, 2011 – full table ).

The following absolute murder counts per-country are not comparable because they are not adjusted by each country's total population. Nonetheless, they are included here for reference, with 2010 used as the base year (they may or may not include justifiable homicide, depending on the jurisdiction). There were 52,260 murders in Brazil, consecutively elevating the record set in 2009.[108] Over half a million people were shot to death in Brazil between 1979 and 2003.[109] 33,335 murder cases were registered across India,[110] approximately 17,000 murders in Colombia (the murder rate was 38 per 100,000 people, in 2008 murders went down to 15,000),[111] approximately 16,000 murders in South Africa,[112] approximately 15,000 murders in the United States,[113] approximately 26,000 murders in Mexico,[114] about 8,000 murders committed in Russia,[115] approximately 13,000 murders in Venezuela,[116] approximately 4,000 murders in El Salvador,[117] approximately 1,400 murders in Jamaica,[118] approximately 550 murders in Canada[119] and approximately 470 murders in Trinidad and Tobago.[118] Pakistan reported 12,580 murders.[120]

Murder in the United States

 
Lake Bodom murders in Espoo, Finland is the most famous unsolved homicide cases in Finnish criminal history.[121] The tent is investigated immediately after the murders in 1960.
 
The scene of a murder in Rio de Janeiro. More than 800,000 people were murdered in Brazil between 1980 and 2004.[122]

In the United States, 666,160 people were killed between 1960 and 1996.[123] Approximately 90% of murders in the US are committed by males.[124] Between 1976 and 2005, 23.5% of all murder victims and 64.8% of victims murdered by intimate partners were female.[125] For women in the US, homicide is the leading cause of death in the workplace.[126]

In the US, murder is the leading cause of death for African American males aged 15 to 34. Between 1976 and 2008, African Americans were victims of 329,825 homicides.[127][128] In 2006, Federal Bureau of Investigation's Supplementary Homicide Report indicated that nearly half of the 14,990 murder victims that year were Black (7421).[129] In the year 2007, there were 3,221 black victims and 3,587 white victims of non-negligent homicides. While 2,905 of the black victims were killed by a black offender, 2,918 of the white victims were killed by white offenders. There were 566 white victims of black offenders and 245 black victims of white offenders.[130] The "white" category in the Uniform Crime Reports (UCR) includes non-black Hispanics.[131] Murder demographics are affected by the improvement of trauma care, which has resulted in reduced lethality of violent assaults – thus the murder rate may not necessarily indicate the overall level of social violence.[132]

Workplace homicide, which tripled during the 1980s, is the fastest growing category of murder in America.[126][133][134]

Development of murder rates over time in different countries is often used by both supporters and opponents of capital punishment and gun control. Using properly filtered data, it is possible to make the case for or against either of these issues. For example, one could look at murder rates in the United States from 1950 to 2000,[135] and notice that those rates went up sharply shortly after a moratorium on death sentences was effectively imposed in the late 1960s. This fact has been used to argue that capital punishment serves as a deterrent and, as such, it is morally justified. Capital punishment opponents frequently counter that the United States has much higher murder rates than Canada and most European Union countries, although all those countries have abolished the death penalty. Overall, the global pattern is too complex, and on average, the influence of both these factors may not be significant and could be more social, economic, and cultural.

Despite the immense improvements in forensics in the past few decades, the fraction of murders solved has decreased in the United States, from 90% in 1960 to 61% in 2007.[136] Solved murder rates in major U.S. cities varied in 2007 from 36% in Boston, Massachusetts to 76% in San Jose, California.[137] Major factors affecting the arrest rate include witness cooperation[136] and the number of people assigned to investigate the case.[137]

History of murder rates

 
Intentional homicide rate per 100,000 inhabitants, 2009

According to scholar Pieter Spierenburg homicide rates per 100,000 in Europe have fallen over the centuries, from 35 per 100,000 in medieval times, to 20 in 1500 AD, 5 in 1700, to below two per 100,000 in 1900.[138]

In the United States, murder rates have been higher and have fluctuated. They fell below 2 per 100,000 by 1900, rose during the first half of the century, dropped in the years following World War II, and bottomed out at 4.0 in 1957 before rising again.[139] The rate stayed in 9 to 10 range most of the period from 1972 to 1994, before falling to 5 in present times.[138] The increase since 1957 would have been even greater if not for the significant improvements in medical techniques and emergency response times, which mean that more and more attempted homicide victims survive. According to one estimate, if the lethality levels of criminal assaults of 1964 still applied in 1993, the country would have seen the murder rate of around 26 per 100,000, almost triple the actually observed rate of 9.5 per 100,000.[132]

 
The historical homicide rate in Stockholm since 1400 AD. The murder rate was very high in the Middle Ages. The rate has declined greatly: from 45/100,000 to a low of 0.6 in the 1950s. The last decades have seen the homicide rate rise slowly.

A similar, but less pronounced pattern has been seen in major European countries as well. The murder rate in the United Kingdom fell to 1 per 100,000 by the beginning of the 20th century and as low as 0.62 per 100,000 in 1960, and was at 1.28 per 100,000 as of 2009. The murder rate in France (excluding Corsica) bottomed out after World War II at less than 0.4 per 100,000, quadrupling to 1.6 per 100,000 since then.[140]

The specific factors driving this dynamics in murder rates are complex and not universally agreed upon. Much of the raise in the U.S. murder rate during the first half of the 20th century is generally thought to be attributed to gang violence associated with Prohibition. Since most murders are committed by young males, the near simultaneous low in the murder rates of major developed countries circa 1960 can be attributed to low birth rates during the Great Depression and World War II. Causes of further moves are more controversial. Some of the more exotic factors claimed to affect murder rates include the availability of abortion[141] and the likelihood of chronic exposure to lead during childhood (due to the use of leaded paint in houses and tetraethyllead as a gasoline additive in internal combustion engines).[142]

Investigation

The success rate of criminal investigations into murders (the clearance rate) tends to be relatively high for murder compared to other crimes, due to its seriousness. In the United States, the clearance rate was 62.6% in 2004.

See also

Lists related to murder

Related topics

Murder laws by country

Notes

  1. ^ This is "malice" in a technical legal sense, not the more usual English sense denoting an emotional state. See malice (law).

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Bibliography

  • Lord Mustill on the Common Law concerning murder
  • Sir Edward Coke Co. Inst., Pt. III, ch.7, p. 50

External links

  • Introduction and Updated Information on the Seville Statement on Violence
  • The Seville Statement
  • Atlas of United States Mortality – U.S. Centers for Disease Control
  • Cezanne's depiction of "The Murder" – National Museums Liverpool

murder, other, uses, disambiguation, double, disambiguation, unlawful, killing, another, human, without, justification, valid, excuse, especially, unlawful, killing, another, human, with, malice, aforethought, this, state, mind, depending, upon, jurisdiction, . For other uses see Murder disambiguation Double Murder and Murderer disambiguation Murder is the unlawful killing of another human without justification or valid excuse especially the unlawful killing of another human with malice aforethought 1 2 3 This state of mind may depending upon the jurisdiction distinguish murder from other forms of unlawful homicide such as manslaughter Manslaughter is killing committed in the absence of malice note 1 brought about by reasonable provocation or diminished capacity Involuntary manslaughter where it is recognized is a killing that lacks all but the most attenuated guilty intent recklessness Murder in the House by Jakub Schikaneder Most societies consider murder to be an extremely serious crime and thus that a person convicted of murder should receive harsh punishments for the purposes of retribution deterrence rehabilitation or incapacitation In most countries a person convicted of murder generally faces a long term prison sentence a life sentence or capital punishment 4 Contents 1 Etymology 2 Use of the term 3 Definition 3 1 Degrees of murder 3 2 Common law 3 3 Exclusions 3 3 1 General 3 3 2 Specific to certain countries 3 4 Victim 3 5 Mitigating circumstances 3 5 1 Insanity 3 5 2 Postpartum depression 3 5 3 Unintentional 3 5 4 Diminished capacity 3 6 Aggravating circumstances 3 7 Felony murder rule 3 8 Year and a day rule 4 Contributing factors 5 Religious attitudes 5 1 Abrahamic context 5 2 Judeo Christian standard 5 3 In Islam 6 Historical attitudes 6 1 Slavery 6 2 Honor killings in Corsica 7 Incidence 7 1 Murder rates by varies countries 7 2 Murder in the United States 7 3 History of murder rates 8 Investigation 9 See also 9 1 Lists related to murder 9 2 Related topics 9 3 Murder laws by country 10 Notes 11 References 12 Bibliography 13 External linksEtymology EditThe modern English word murder descends from the Proto Indo European mŕ trom which meant killing a noun derived from mer to die 5 Proto Germanic in fact had two nouns derived from this word later merging into the modern English noun murthra death killing murder directly from Proto Indo European mŕ trom whence Old English mordor secret or unlawful killing of a person murder mortal sin crime punishment torment misery 6 and murthrijo murderer homicide from the verb murthrijana to murder giving Old English myrthra homicide murder murderer There was a third word for murder in Proto Germanic continuing Proto Indo European mr tos dead compare Latin mors giving Proto Germanic murtha death killing murder and Old English morth death crime murder compare German Mord The d first attested in Middle English mordre mourdre murder murdre could have been influenced by Old French murdre itself derived from the Germanic noun via Frankish murthra compare Old High German murdreo murdiro though the same sound development can be seen with burden from burthen The alternative murther attested up to the 19th century springs directly from the Old English forms Middle English mordre is a verb from Anglo Saxon myrdrian from Proto Germanic murthrijana or according to the Oxford English Dictionary from the noun 7 Use of the term EditIn many countries in news reports out of concern for being accused of defamation 8 journalists are generally careful not to identify a suspect as a murderer until the suspect is convicted of murder in a court of law After arrest for example journalists may instead write that the person was arrested on suspicion of murder 9 or after a prosecutor files charges as an accused murderer 10 Opponents of abortion consider abortion a form of murder 11 12 In some countries a fetus is a legal person who can be murdered and killing a pregnant woman is considered a double homicide 13 14 Definition EditThe eighteenth century English jurist William Blackstone citing Edward Coke in his Commentaries on the Laws of England set out the common law definition of murder which by this definition occurs when a person of sound memory and discretion unlawfully kills any reasonable creature in being and under the king s peace with malice aforethought either express or implied 15 The elements of common law murder are unlawful killing through criminal act or omission of a human by another human with malice aforethought 16 Unlawful This distinguishes murder from killings that are done within the boundaries of law such as capital punishment justified self defense or the killing of enemy combatants by lawful combatants as well as causing collateral damage to non combatants during a war 17 Killing At common law life ended with cardiopulmonary arrest 16 the total and irreversible cessation of blood circulation and respiration 16 With advances in medical technology courts have adopted irreversible cessation of all brain function as marking the end of life 16 Criminal act or omission Killing can be committed by an act or an omission 18 Of a human This element presents the issue of when life begins At common law a fetus was not a human being 19 Life began when the fetus passed through the vagina and took its first breath 16 By another human In early common law suicide was considered murder 16 The requirement that the person killed be someone other than the perpetrator excluded suicide from the definition of murder With malice aforethought Originally malice aforethought carried its everyday meaning a deliberate and premeditated prior intent killing of another motivated by ill will Murder necessarily required that an appreciable time pass between the formation and execution of the intent to kill The courts broadened the scope of murder by eliminating the requirement of actual premeditation and deliberation as well as true malice All that was required for malice aforethought to exist is that the perpetrator act with one of the four states of mind that constitutes malice The four states of mind recognized as constituting malice are 20 Intent to kill Intent to inflict grievous bodily harm short of death Reckless indifference to an unjustifiably high risk to human life sometimes described as an abandoned and malignant heart orIntent to commit a dangerous felony the felony murder doctrine Under state of mind i intent to kill the deadly weapon rule applies Thus if the defendant intentionally uses a deadly weapon or instrument against the victim such use authorizes a permissive inference of intent to kill Examples of deadly weapons and instruments include but are not limited to guns knives deadly toxins or chemicals or gases and even vehicles when intentionally used to harm one or more victims Under state of mind iii an abandoned and malignant heart the killing must result from the defendant s conduct involving a reckless indifference to human life and a conscious disregard of an unreasonable risk of death or serious bodily injury In Australian jurisdictions the unreasonable risk must amount to a foreseen probability of death or grievous bodily harm in most states as opposed to possibility 21 Under state of mind iv the felony murder doctrine the felony committed must be an inherently dangerous felony such as burglary arson rape robbery or kidnapping Importantly the underlying felony cannot be a lesser included offense such as assault otherwise all criminal homicides would be murder as all are felonies In Spanish criminal law murder takes place when any of these requirements concur Treachery the use of means to avoid risk for the aggressor or to ensure that the crime goes unpunished price or reward financial gain or viciousness deliberately increasing the pain of the victim After the last reform of the Spanish Criminal Code in force since July 1 2015 another circumstance that turns homicide into murder is the desire to facilitate the commission of another crime or to prevent it from being discovered 22 As with most legal terms the precise definition of murder varies between jurisdictions and is usually codified in some form of legislation Even when the legal distinction between murder and manslaughter is clear it is not unknown for a jury to find a murder defendant guilty of the lesser offense The jury might sympathize with the defendant e g in a crime of passion or in the case of a bullied victim who kills their tormentor and the jury may wish to protect the defendant from a sentence of life imprisonment or execution Degrees of murder Edit Murder in the second degree and Premeditated murder redirect here For the album see Murder in the Second Degree For the film see Premeditated Murder Some jurisdictions divide murder by degrees The distinction between first and second degree murder exists for example in Canadian murder law and U S murder law The most common division is between first and second degree murder Generally second degree murder is common law murder and first degree is an aggravated form The aggravating factors of first degree murder depend on the jurisdiction but may include a specific intent to kill premeditation or deliberation In some murders committed by acts such as strangulation poisoning or lying in wait are also treated as first degree murder 23 A few states in the U S further distinguish third degree murder but they differ significantly in which kinds of murders they classify as second degree versus third degree For example Minnesota defines third degree murder as depraved heart murder whereas Florida defines third degree murder as felony murder except when the underlying felony is specifically listed in the definition of first degree murder 24 25 Some jurisdictions also distinguish premeditated murder This is the crime of wrongfully and intentionally causing the death of another human being also known as murder after rationally considering the timing or method of doing so in order to either increase the likelihood of success or to evade detection or apprehension 26 State laws in the United States vary as to definitions of premeditation In some states premeditation may be construed as taking place mere seconds before the murder Premeditated murder is one of the most serious forms of homicide and is punished more severely than manslaughter or other types of homicide often with a life sentence without the possibility of parole or in some countries the death penalty In the U S federal law 18 U S C 1111 a criminalizes premeditated murder felony murder and second degree murder committed under situations where federal jurisdiction applies 27 In Canada the criminal code classifies murder as either first or second degree The former type of murder is often called premeditated murder although premeditation is not the only way murder can be classified as first degree Common law Edit According to Blackstone English common law identified murder as a public wrong 28 According to common law murder is considered to be malum in se that is an act which is evil within itself An act such as murder is wrong or evil by its very nature citation needed and it is the very nature of the act which does not require any specific detailing or definition in the law to consider murder a crime 29 Some jurisdictions still take a common law view of murder In such jurisdictions what is considered to be murder is defined by precedent case law or previous decisions of the courts of law However although the common law is by nature flexible and adaptable in the interests both of certainty and of securing convictions most common law jurisdictions have codified their criminal law and now have statutory definitions of murder Exclusions Edit General Edit Although laws vary by country there are circumstances of exclusion that are common in many legal systems The killing of enemy combatants who have not surrendered when committed by lawful combatants in accordance with lawful orders in war is generally not considered murder Illicit killings within a war may constitute murder or homicidal war crimes see Laws of war Self defense acting in self defense or in defense of another person is generally accepted as legal justification for killing a person in situations that would otherwise have been murder However a self defense killing might be considered manslaughter if the killer established control of the situation before the killing took place In the case of self defense it is called a justifiable homicide 30 Unlawful killings without malice or intent are considered manslaughter In many common law countries provocation is a partial defense to a charge of murder which acts by converting what would otherwise have been murder into manslaughter this is voluntary manslaughter which is more severe than involuntary manslaughter Accidental killings are considered homicides Depending on the circumstances these may or may not be considered criminal offenses they are often considered manslaughter Suicide does not constitute murder in most societies Assisting a suicide however may be considered murder in some circumstances Specific to certain countries Edit Capital punishment some countries practice the death penalty Capital punishment may be ordered by a legitimate court of law as the result of a conviction in a criminal trial with due process for a serious crime All member states of the Council of Europe are prohibited from using the death penalty Euthanasia doctor assisted suicide the administration of lethal drugs by a doctor to a terminally ill patient if the intention is solely to alleviate pain in many jurisdictions it is seen as a special case see the doctrine of double effect and the case of Dr John Bodkin Adams 31 Killing to prevent the theft of one s property may be legal depending on the jurisdiction 32 33 In 2013 a jury in south Texas acquitted a man who killed a sex worker who attempted to run away with his money 34 Killing an intruder who is found by an owner to be in the owner s home having entered unlawfully legal in most US states see Castle doctrine 35 Killing to prevent specific forms of aggravated rape or sexual assault killing of attacker by the potential victim or by witnesses to the scene legal in parts of the US and in various other countries 36 In some countries the killing of a woman or girl in specific circumstances e g when she commits adultery and is killed by her husband or other family members known as honor killing is not considered murder 37 In the United States in some states and in federal jurisdiction a killing by a police officer is excluded from prosecution if the officer believes they are being threatened with deadly force by the victim This may include such actions by the victim as reaching into a glove compartment or pocket for license and registration if the officer thinks that the victim might be reaching for a gun 38 Victim Edit All jurisdictions require that the victim be a natural person that is a human being who was still alive before being murdered In other words under the law one cannot murder a corpse a corporation a non human animal or any other non human organism such as a plant or bacterium California s murder statute penal code section 187 expressly mentioned a fetus as being capable of being killed and was interpreted by the Supreme Court of California in 1994 as not requiring any proof of the viability of the fetus as a prerequisite to a murder conviction 39 This holding has two implications Firstly a defendant in California can be convicted of murder for killing a fetus which the mother herself could have terminated without committing a crime 39 And secondly as stated by Justice Stanley Mosk in his dissent because women carrying nonviable fetuses may not be visibly pregnant it may be possible for a defendant to be convicted of intentionally murdering a person they did not know existed 39 Mitigating circumstances Edit Some countries allow conditions that affect the balance of the mind to be regarded as mitigating circumstances This means that a person may be found guilty of manslaughter on the basis of diminished responsibility rather than being found guilty of murder if it can be proved that the killer was suffering from a condition that affected their judgment at the time Depression post traumatic stress disorder and medication side effects are examples of conditions that may be taken into account when assessing responsibility Insanity Edit Main articles Insanity defense and M Naghten rules Mental disorder may apply to a wide range of disorders including psychosis caused by schizophrenia and dementia and excuse the person from the need to undergo the stress of a trial as to liability Usually sociopathy and other personality disorders are not legally considered insanity In some jurisdictions following the pre trial hearing to determine the extent of the disorder the defense of not guilty by reason of insanity may be used to get a not guilty verdict 40 This defense has two elements That the defendant had a serious mental illness disease or defect That the defendant s mental condition at the time of the killing rendered the perpetrator unable to determine right from wrong or that what they were doing was wrong Aaron Alexis holding a shotgun during his rampage Under New York law for example 40 15 Mental disease or defect In any prosecution for an offense it is an affirmative defence that when the defendant engaged in the proscribed conduct he lacked criminal responsibility by reason of mental disease or defect Such lack of criminal responsibility means that at the time of such conduct as a result of mental disease or defect he lacked substantial capacity to know or appreciate either 1 The nature and consequences of such conduct or 2 That such conduct was wrong N Y Penal Law 40 15 41 Under the French Penal Code Article 122 1A person is not criminally liable who when the act was committed was suffering from a psychological or neuropsychological disorder which destroyed his discernment or his ability to control his actions A person who at the time he acted was suffering from a psychological or neuropsychological disorder which reduced his discernment or impeded his ability to control his actions remains punishable however the court shall take this into account when it decides the penalty and determines its regime Penal Code 122 1 found at Legifrance web site Those who successfully argue a defense based on a mental disorder are usually referred to mandatory clinical treatment until they are certified safe to be released back into the community rather than prison 42 Postpartum depression Edit Postpartum depression also known as post natal depression is recognized in some countries as a mitigating factor in cases of infanticide According to Susan Friedman Two dozen nations have infanticide laws that decrease the penalty for mothers who kill their children of up to one year of age The United States does not have such a law but mentally ill mothers may plead not guilty by reason of insanity 43 In the law of the Republic of Ireland infanticide was made a separate crime from murder in 1949 applicable for the mother of a baby under one year old where the balance of her mind was disturbed by reason of her not having fully recovered from the effect of giving birth to the child or by reason of the effect of lactation consequent upon the birth of the child 44 Since independence death sentences for murder in such cases had always been commuted 45 the new act was intended to eliminate all the terrible ritual of the black cap and the solemn words of the judge pronouncing sentence of death in those cases where it is clear to the Court and to everybody except perhaps the unfortunate accused that the sentence will never be carried out 46 In Russia murder of a newborn child by the mother has been a separate crime since 1996 47 Unintentional Edit For a killing to be considered murder in nine out of fifty states in the US there normally needs to be an element of intent A defendant may argue that they took precautions not to kill that the death could not have been anticipated or was unavoidable As a general rule manslaughter 48 constitutes reckless killing but manslaughter also includes criminally negligent i e grossly negligent homicide 49 Unintentional killing that results from an involuntary action generally cannot constitute murder 50 After examining the evidence a judge or jury depending on the jurisdiction would determine whether the killing was intentional or unintentional Diminished capacity Edit In jurisdictions using the Uniform Penal Code such as California diminished capacity may be a defense For example Dan White used this defense 51 to obtain a manslaughter conviction instead of murder in the assassination of Mayor George Moscone and Supervisor Harvey Milk Afterward California amended its penal code to provide As a matter of public policy there shall be no defense of diminished capacity diminished responsibility or irresistible impulse in a criminal action 52 Aggravating circumstances Edit Murder with specified aggravating circumstances is often punished more harshly Depending on the jurisdiction such circumstances may include Premeditation Poisoning Murder of a child Multiple murders committed within the same transaction or scheme Murder of a police officer 53 54 judge firefighter or witness to a crime 55 Murder of a pregnant woman 56 Crime committed for pay or other reward such as contract killing 57 Exceptional brutality or cruelty Methods which are dangerous to the public 58 e g explosion arson shooting in a crowd etc 59 Murder for a political cause 53 60 Murder committed in order to conceal another crime or facilitate its commission 61 Hate crimes which occur when a perpetrator targets a victim because of their perceived membership in a certain social group Treachery e g Heimtucke in German law In the United States and Canada these murders are referred to as first degree or aggravated murders 62 63 Under English criminal law murder always carries a mandatory life sentence but is not classified into degrees Penalties for murder committed under aggravating circumstances are often higher under English law than the 15 year minimum non parole period that otherwise serves as a starting point for a murder committed by an adult Felony murder rule Edit Main article Felony murder rule A legal doctrine in some common law jurisdictions broadens the crime of murder when an offender kills in the commission of a dangerous crime regardless of intent he or she is guilty of murder The felony murder rule is often justified by its supporters as a means of preventing dangerous felonies 64 but the case of Ryan Holle 65 shows it can be used very widely Year and a day rule Edit Main article Year and a day rule In some common law jurisdictions a defendant accused of murder is not guilty if the victim survives for longer than one year and one day after the attack 66 This reflects the likelihood that if the victim dies other factors will have contributed to the cause of death breaking the chain of causation and also means that the responsible person does not have a charge of murder hanging over their head indefinitely 67 Subject to any statute of limitations the accused could still be charged with an offense reflecting the seriousness of the initial assault With advances in modern medicine most countries have abandoned a fixed time period and test causation on the facts of the case This is known as delayed death and cases where this was applied or was attempted to be applied go back to at least 1966 68 In England and Wales the year and a day rule was abolished by the Law Reform Year and a Day Rule Act 1996 However if death occurs three years or more after the original attack then prosecution can take place only with the attorney general s approval In the United States many jurisdictions have abolished the rule as well 69 70 Abolition of the rule has been accomplished by enactment of statutory criminal codes which had the effect of displacing the common law definitions of crimes and corresponding defenses In 2001 the Supreme Court of the United States held that retroactive application of a state supreme court decision abolishing the year and a day rule did not violate the Ex Post Facto Clause of Article I of the United States Constitution 71 The potential effect of fully abolishing the rule can be seen in the case of 74 year old William Barnes charged with the murder of a Philadelphia police officer Walter T Barclay Jr who he had shot nearly 41 years previously Barnes had served 16 years in prison for attempting to murder Barkley but when the policeman died on August 19 2007 this was alleged to be from complications of the wounds suffered from the shooting and Barnes was charged with his murder He was acquitted on May 24 2010 72 Contributing factors EditAccording to Peter Morall the motivations for murder fit into the following 4 categories 73 Lust The murderer seeks to kill rivals to obtain objects of their sexual desire Love The murderer seeks to mercy kill a loved one with a major deformity or an incurable illness Loathing The murderer seeks to kill a loathed person such as an abusive parent or members of a loathed group or culture Loot The murderer seeks some form of financial gain Morall argues that a motive alone is insufficient to explain criminal killing as people can experience those impulse without killing Morall insists risk factors that may increase the chance that somebody will commit a murder include 73 Testosterone the primary male sex hormone is correlated with competitive and assertive behaviour Reduction in serotonin increases likelihood of impulsive hostile behaviour Alteration in the breakdown of glucose appears to affect mood and behaviour Hyperglycemia and Hypoglycemia can both lead to aggression Consumption of alcohol can lead to reduced self control Environmental pollutants circulating in the body are linked to heightened aggression Malnutrition from eating too much junk food can provoke aggressive behaviour and even murder Certain personality disorders are associated with an increased homicide rate most notably narcissistic anti social and histrionic personality disorders and those associated with psychopathology 74 Some aspects of homicides including the genetic relations or proximity between murderers and their victims as in the Cinderella effect may potentially be explained by the evolution theory or evolutionary psychology 75 Several studies have shown that there is a correlation between murder rates and poverty 76 77 78 79 A 2000 study showed that regions of the state of Sao Paulo in Brazil with lower income also had higher rates of murder 79 Religious attitudes EditAbrahamic context Edit A group of Thugs strangling a traveller on a highway in the early 19th century In the Abrahamic religions the first ever murder was committed by Cain against his brother Abel out of jealousy 80 In the past certain types of homicide were lawful and justified Georg Oesterdiekhoff wrote Evans Pritchard says about the Nuer from Sudan Homicide is not forbidden and Nuer do not think it wrong to kill a man in fair fight On the contrary a man who slays another in combat is admired for his courage and skill Evans Pritchard 1956 195 This statement is true for most African tribes for pre modern Europeans for Indigenous Australians and for Native Americans according to ethnographic reports from all over the world Homicides rise to incredible numbers among headhunter cultures such as the Papua When a boy is born the father has to kill a man He needs a name for his child and can receive it only by a man he himself has murdered When a man wants to marry he must kill a man When a man dies his family again has to kill a man 81 In many such societies the redress was not via a legal system but by blood revenge although there might also be a form of payment that could be made instead such as the weregild which in early Germanic society could be paid to the victim s family in lieu of their right of revenge One of the oldest known prohibitions against murder appears in the Sumerian Code of Ur Nammu written sometime between 2100 and 2050 BC The code states If a man commits a murder that man must be killed Judeo Christian standard Edit In Judeo Christian traditions the prohibition against murder is one of the Ten Commandments given by God to Moses in Exodus 20v13 and Deuteronomy 5v17 The Vulgate and subsequent early English translations of the Bible used the term secretly killeth his neighbour or smiteth his neighbour secretly rather than murder for the Latin clam percusserit proximum 82 83 Later editions such as Young s Literal Translation and the World English Bible have translated the Latin occides simply as murder 84 85 rather than the alternatives of kill assassinate fall upon or slay In Islam Edit In Islam according to the Qur an one of the greatest sins is to kill a human being who has committed no fault 86 Do not take a human life made sacred by Allah except with legal right Quran 17 33 That is why We ordained for the Children of Israel that whoever takes a life unless as a punishment for murder or mischief in the land it will be as if they killed all of humanity and whoever saves a life it will be as if they saved all of humanity Quran 5 32 They are those who do not invoke any other god besides Allah nor take a human life made sacred by Allah except with legal right 1 nor commit fornication And whoever does any of this will face the penalty Quran 25 68 Historical attitudes EditThe term assassin derives from Hashshashin 87 a militant Ismaili Shi ite sect active from the 8th to 14th centuries This mystic secret society killed members of the Abbasid Fatimid Seljuq and Crusader elite for political and religious reasons 88 The Thuggee cult that plagued India was devoted to Kali the goddess of death and destruction 89 90 According to some estimates the Thuggees murdered 1 million people between 1740 and 1840 91 The Aztecs believed that without regular offerings of blood the sun god Huitzilopochtli would withdraw his support for them and destroy the world as they knew it 92 According to Ross Hassig author of Aztec Warfare between 10 000 and 80 400 persons were sacrificed in the 1487 re consecration of the Great Pyramid of Tenochtitlan 93 94 Japanese samurai had the right to strike with their sword at anyone of a lower class who compromised their honour 95 Slavery Edit Southern slave codes did make willful killing of a slave illegal in most cases 96 For example the 1860 Mississippi case of Oliver v State charged the defendant with murdering his own slave 97 In 1811 the wealthy white planter Arthur Hodge was hanged for murdering several of his slaves on his plantation in the Virgin Islands 98 Honor killings in Corsica Edit In Corsica vendetta was a social code that required Corsicans to kill anyone who wronged their family honor Between 1821 and 1852 no fewer than 4 300 murders were perpetrated in Corsica 99 Incidence EditSee also List of countries by intentional homicide rate International murder rate per 100 000 inhabitants 2011 0 1 1 2 2 5 5 10 10 20 gt 20 The World Health Organization reported in October 2002 that a person is murdered every 60 seconds 100 An estimated 520 000 people were murdered in 2000 around the globe Another study estimated the worldwide murder rate at 456 300 in 2010 with a 35 increase since 1990 101 Two fifths of them were young people between the ages of 10 and 29 who were killed by other young people 102 Because murder is the least likely crime to go unreported statistics of murder are seen as a bellwether of overall crime rates 103 Murder rates vary greatly among countries and societies around the world In the Western world murder rates in most countries have declined significantly during the 20th century and are now between 1 and 4 cases per 100 000 people per year Latin America and the Caribbean the region with the highest murder rate in the world 104 experienced more than 2 5 million murders between 2000 and 2017 105 UNODC Per 100 000 population 2011 Murder rates by varies countries Edit Murder rates in jurisdictions such as Japan Singapore Hong Kong Iceland Switzerland Italy Spain and Germany are among the lowest in the world around 0 3 1 cases per 100 000 people per year the rate of the United States is among the highest of developed countries around 4 5 in 2014 106 with rates in larger cities sometimes over 40 per 100 000 107 The top ten highest murder rates are in Honduras 91 6 per 100 000 El Salvador Ivory Coast Venezuela Belize Jamaica U S Virgin Islands Guatemala Saint Kitts and Nevis and Zambia UNODC 2011 full table here The following absolute murder counts per country are not comparable because they are not adjusted by each country s total population Nonetheless they are included here for reference with 2010 used as the base year they may or may not include justifiable homicide depending on the jurisdiction There were 52 260 murders in Brazil consecutively elevating the record set in 2009 108 Over half a million people were shot to death in Brazil between 1979 and 2003 109 33 335 murder cases were registered across India 110 approximately 17 000 murders in Colombia the murder rate was 38 per 100 000 people in 2008 murders went down to 15 000 111 approximately 16 000 murders in South Africa 112 approximately 15 000 murders in the United States 113 approximately 26 000 murders in Mexico 114 about 8 000 murders committed in Russia 115 approximately 13 000 murders in Venezuela 116 approximately 4 000 murders in El Salvador 117 approximately 1 400 murders in Jamaica 118 approximately 550 murders in Canada 119 and approximately 470 murders in Trinidad and Tobago 118 Pakistan reported 12 580 murders 120 Murder in the United States Edit Lake Bodom murders in Espoo Finland is the most famous unsolved homicide cases in Finnish criminal history 121 The tent is investigated immediately after the murders in 1960 The scene of a murder in Rio de Janeiro More than 800 000 people were murdered in Brazil between 1980 and 2004 122 In the United States 666 160 people were killed between 1960 and 1996 123 Approximately 90 of murders in the US are committed by males 124 Between 1976 and 2005 23 5 of all murder victims and 64 8 of victims murdered by intimate partners were female 125 For women in the US homicide is the leading cause of death in the workplace 126 In the US murder is the leading cause of death for African American males aged 15 to 34 Between 1976 and 2008 African Americans were victims of 329 825 homicides 127 128 In 2006 Federal Bureau of Investigation s Supplementary Homicide Report indicated that nearly half of the 14 990 murder victims that year were Black 7421 129 In the year 2007 there were 3 221 black victims and 3 587 white victims of non negligent homicides While 2 905 of the black victims were killed by a black offender 2 918 of the white victims were killed by white offenders There were 566 white victims of black offenders and 245 black victims of white offenders 130 The white category in the Uniform Crime Reports UCR includes non black Hispanics 131 Murder demographics are affected by the improvement of trauma care which has resulted in reduced lethality of violent assaults thus the murder rate may not necessarily indicate the overall level of social violence 132 Workplace homicide which tripled during the 1980s is the fastest growing category of murder in America 126 133 134 Development of murder rates over time in different countries is often used by both supporters and opponents of capital punishment and gun control Using properly filtered data it is possible to make the case for or against either of these issues For example one could look at murder rates in the United States from 1950 to 2000 135 and notice that those rates went up sharply shortly after a moratorium on death sentences was effectively imposed in the late 1960s This fact has been used to argue that capital punishment serves as a deterrent and as such it is morally justified Capital punishment opponents frequently counter that the United States has much higher murder rates than Canada and most European Union countries although all those countries have abolished the death penalty Overall the global pattern is too complex and on average the influence of both these factors may not be significant and could be more social economic and cultural Despite the immense improvements in forensics in the past few decades the fraction of murders solved has decreased in the United States from 90 in 1960 to 61 in 2007 136 Solved murder rates in major U S cities varied in 2007 from 36 in Boston Massachusetts to 76 in San Jose California 137 Major factors affecting the arrest rate include witness cooperation 136 and the number of people assigned to investigate the case 137 History of murder rates Edit Intentional homicide rate per 100 000 inhabitants 2009 According to scholar Pieter Spierenburg homicide rates per 100 000 in Europe have fallen over the centuries from 35 per 100 000 in medieval times to 20 in 1500 AD 5 in 1700 to below two per 100 000 in 1900 138 In the United States murder rates have been higher and have fluctuated They fell below 2 per 100 000 by 1900 rose during the first half of the century dropped in the years following World War II and bottomed out at 4 0 in 1957 before rising again 139 The rate stayed in 9 to 10 range most of the period from 1972 to 1994 before falling to 5 in present times 138 The increase since 1957 would have been even greater if not for the significant improvements in medical techniques and emergency response times which mean that more and more attempted homicide victims survive According to one estimate if the lethality levels of criminal assaults of 1964 still applied in 1993 the country would have seen the murder rate of around 26 per 100 000 almost triple the actually observed rate of 9 5 per 100 000 132 The historical homicide rate in Stockholm since 1400 AD The murder rate was very high in the Middle Ages The rate has declined greatly from 45 100 000 to a low of 0 6 in the 1950s The last decades have seen the homicide rate rise slowly A similar but less pronounced pattern has been seen in major European countries as well The murder rate in the United Kingdom fell to 1 per 100 000 by the beginning of the 20th century and as low as 0 62 per 100 000 in 1960 and was at 1 28 per 100 000 as of 2009 update The murder rate in France excluding Corsica bottomed out after World War II at less than 0 4 per 100 000 quadrupling to 1 6 per 100 000 since then 140 The specific factors driving this dynamics in murder rates are complex and not universally agreed upon Much of the raise in the U S murder rate during the first half of the 20th century is generally thought to be attributed to gang violence associated with Prohibition Since most murders are committed by young males the near simultaneous low in the murder rates of major developed countries circa 1960 can be attributed to low birth rates during the Great Depression and World War II Causes of further moves are more controversial Some of the more exotic factors claimed to affect murder rates include the availability of abortion 141 and the likelihood of chronic exposure to lead during childhood due to the use of leaded paint in houses and tetraethyllead as a gasoline additive in internal combustion engines 142 Investigation EditThe success rate of criminal investigations into murders the clearance rate tends to be relatively high for murder compared to other crimes due to its seriousness In the United States the clearance rate was 62 6 in 2004 See also EditLists related to murder Edit Lists of murders List of types of killing Axe murder List of unsolved deathsRelated topics Edit Child murder Culpable homicide Depraved heart murder Double murder Execution style murder Letting die Mass murder Misdemeanor murder Murder conviction without a body Seven laws of Noah Stigmatized property Thrill killing Capital murder Assassination the murder of a prominent person such as a head of state or head of government Murder laws by country Edit Australia Brazil Canada China Cuba Denmark England and Wales Finland France Germany Hong Kong India Israel Italy Netherlands Northern Ireland Norway Peru Portugal Romania Russia Sweden Switzerland United StatesNotes Edit This is malice in a technical legal sense not the more usual English sense denoting an emotional state See malice law References Edit West s Encyclopedia of American Law Volume 7 Legal Representation to Oyez West Group 1997 ISBN 978 0314201607 Retrieved 10 September 2017 The unlawful killing of another human being without justification or excuse Murder Merriam Webster Archived from the original on 2 October 2017 Retrieved 10 September 2017 The American Heritage Dictionary 5 ed Random House Publishing Group 2012 ISBN 9780553583229 Retrieved 10 September 2017 The killing of another person without justification or excuse especially the crime of killing a person with malice aforethought or with recklessness manifesting extreme indifference to the value of human life Tran Mark 2011 03 28 China and US among top punishers but death penalty in decline The Guardian London Archived from the original on 2017 02 17 Bynon Theodora 1977 Historical Linguistics Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0521291880 Retrieved 10 September 2017 Murder Archived 2020 07 07 at the Wayback Machine in Online Etymology Dictionary accessed on 17 July 2020 Nielson William A Patch Howard R 1921 Selections from Chaucer New York Harcourt Brace amp Co Retrieved 10 September 2017 See e g Goodman Brenda 27 May 2006 Falsely Accused Suspect Pursues Libel Case New York times Archived from the original on 4 August 2019 Retrieved 4 August 2019 Fisher Doug July 1 2003 Getting a hand up on court crime terms Common Sense Journalism Archived from the original on June 24 2016 Retrieved October 3 2016 Charges amp Allegations new script com Archived from the original on June 3 2016 Retrieved October 2 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States Clark and Ansay eds 154 Archived 2015 05 17 at the Wayback Machine 2002 R v Crabbe 1985 HCA 22 1985 156 CLR 464 26 March 1985 High Court but the common law has been modified in NSW Royall v R 1991 HCA 27 1991 172 CLR 378 25 June 1991 High Court Ley Organica 1 2015 de 30 de marzo por la que se modifica la Ley Organica 10 1995 de 23 de noviembre del Codigo Penal Noticias Juridicas in Spanish Murder in the First and Second Degree 14 17 A murder which shall be perpetrated by poison lying in wait imprisonment starving torture or by any other kind of willful deliberate and premeditated killing or which shall be committed in the perpetration or attempted perpetration of any arson rape or sex offense robbery kidnapping burglary or other felony committed or attempted with the use of a deadly weapon shall be murder in the first degree and shall be punished by death or life imprisonment except that any person under 17 years of age at the time of the murder shall be punished with 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