Fiji Sun

Domestic Abuse: Killers ‘Follow Eight-Stage Pattern’, Study Says

CONTROLLIN­G BEHAVIOUR COULD BE A KEY INDICATOR OF SOMEONE’S POTENTIAL TO KILL THEIR PARTNER, SAYS CRIMINOLOG­Y EXPERT DR JANE MONCKTON SMITH.

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Men who kill their partners follow a “homicide timeline” that could be tracked by police to help prevent deaths, new research suggests. Criminolog­y expert Dr Jane Monckton Smith found an eight-stage pattern in 372 killings in the UK.

The University of Gloucester­shire lecturer said controllin­g behaviour could be a key indicator of someone’s potential to kill their partner.

One murder victim’s father said the findings could help to “save lives”.

About 30,000 women across the world were killed by current or former partners in 2017. Dr Monckton Smith said women account for more than 80 per cent of victims killed by their partners - and most of the time, the partner is male.

The eight steps

To conduct her study, she looked at all cases on the Counting Dead Women website where the woman had had a relationsh­ip with the perpetrato­r - as well as several extra cases such as those of male victims killed by their male partners. The eight steps she discovered in almost all of the 372 killings she studied were:

■ A pre-relationsh­ip history of stalking or abuse by the perpetrato­r

■ The romance developing quickly into a serious relationsh­ip

■ The relationsh­ip becoming dominated by coercive control

■ A trigger to threaten the perpetrato­r’s control - for example, the relationsh­ip ends or the perpetrato­r gets into financial difficulty

■ Escalation - an increase in the intensity or frequency of the partner’s control tactics, such as by stalking or threatenin­g suicide

■ The perpetrato­r has a change in thinking - choosing to move on, either through revenge or by homicide

■ Planning - the perpetrato­r might buy weapons or seek opportunit­ies to get the victim alone

■ Homicide - the perpetrato­r kills his or her partner, and possibly hurts others such as the victim’s children.

The only instance where a stage in the model was not followed was when men did not meet stage one - but this was normally because they had not had a relationsh­ip before, she said.

“We’ve been relying on the ‘crime of passion, spontaneou­s red-mist’ explanatio­n [of killing] forever and it’s just not true,” Dr Monckton Smith told the BBC.

“If you start looking at all these cases, there’s planning, determinat­ion, there’s always coercive control.”

CASE STUDY

Alice Ruggles, 24, had been stalked by her ex-boyfriend, soldier Trimaan Dhillon, after their intense relationsh­ip ended.

Dhillon killed Ms Ruggles after breaking into her Gateshead flat in October 2016.

Her father, Clive Ruggles, said the outcome of the case “absolutely” could have been different if police had known about Dr Monckton Smith’s eight-stage model. “He had a history of stalking and controllin­g - the warning signs were there,” Mr Ruggles said. A domestic homicide review concluded Army officials had failed to record a previous domestic assault charge against Dhillon in Kent. “That informatio­n wasn’t known to Police, Alice had no idea - we had no idea,” Mr Ruggles said. When Dhillon began stalking Miss Ruggles, she and her family “did not realise how much danger she was in”, Mr Ruggles said.

“If [Police] had looked at Jane’s stages, they’d have realised - the constant messages, the emotional blackmail, all of that sort of thing - it was quite clear that he was already onto stage five,” he added.

“We really believe that if this model gets out there and people start acting on it, then it will improve things for people and very likely save lives.”

Dr Monckton Smith has taught her model to lawyers, psychologi­sts, police forces across the country and probation officers.

She hopes that now the study has been published in the Violence Against Women Journal, the model can be rolled out more widely.

“As soon as they see it, victims and profession­als are able to say, ‘Oh my God, I’ve got a case at stage three’, or ‘My relationsh­ip is at stage five’,” she said.

“Police have been incredibly receptive, and recognise the steps in cases they are working on, because it speaks to their experience and makes an order out of the chaos that is domestic abuse, coercive control and stalking,” she added.

‘DAMAGING HEADLINES’

Dr Monckton Smith said once police learn the eight stages, they will be able to keep track of certain potential perpetrato­rs - while victims will more easily be able to articulate to profession­als what situation they are in.

She also said there should be more research into ways in which victims can leave controllin­g relationsh­ips safely, and into what causes people to seek control in intimate relationsh­ips.

The charity Women’s Aid said improving understand­ing of domestic homicides could help save lives.

 ??  ?? Men who kill their partners follow a ‘homicide timeline’ that could be tracked by Police to help prevent deaths, new research suggests.
Men who kill their partners follow a ‘homicide timeline’ that could be tracked by Police to help prevent deaths, new research suggests.

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