Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Cuomo cites intimate partners

- Dan Clark The Journal Sentinel’s PolitiFact Wisconsin is part of the PolitiFact network.

Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo wants state lawmakers to pass a bill he believes would prevent more women from being murdered by people close to them.

The bill would remove guns from people convicted on misdemeano­r domestic violence charges. Guns are currently only taken away if someone has a felony conviction for domestic violence.

“Half of the American women who are murdered are killed by their intimate partners,” Cuomo said at a March 13 rally.

The bill is part of Cuomo’s 2018 Women’s Agenda, a list of more than two dozen proposals concerning health care, equal pay and gun violence among other issues.

The domestic violence bill doubles as one of the governor’s proposals to add to the state’s gun control laws. New York state already has one of the lowest rates of gun-caused death in the country, but Cuomo believes the proposal could drive that number lower.

Is he right that half of women murdered in the U.S. are killed by their intimate partners?

The data

Cuomo’s claim comes from data released by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in 2017.

The agency looked at the homicides of 10,018 adult women in 13 states from 2003 to 2014.

The relationsh­ip between the victim and the suspect was known in 8,028 of the cases.

Of those, 4,442 homicides, or 55.3 percent, involved an intimate partner. The report defines an intimate partner as a current, former, or unspecifie­d spouse or romantic partner. Women killed while intervenin­g in an incident of intimate partner violence, like a friend or family member, were also counted in this category.

Almost 80 percent of intimate partner homicides involved a current intimate partner. About 11 percent of victims had experience­d violence involving their intimate partner in

the month preceding their death.

An argument preceded the victim’s death in about a third of intimate partner homicides, the report found.

Gun-involved homicides

The report does not include data on the criminal history of the suspects. It’s not known what share had a history of domestic violence.

But the agency did collect informatio­n on the type of weapon used in each homicide.

A firearm was used in 5,234 of the total homicides, or almost 54 percent. That’s more than double the number of victims killed with a sharp instrument, the next most-documented weapon.

The authors of the report suggest legislatio­n like Cuomo’s could help prevent more female homicides in the future.

“State statutes limiting access to firearms for persons under a domestic violence restrainin­g order can serve as another preventive measure associated with reduced risk for intimate partner homicide and firearm intimate partner homicide,” the report said.

A report from the U.S. Bureau of Justice Statistics found an estimated 45 percent of female homicide victims were killed by an intimate partner in 2007.

New York state data

Numbers in New York state mirror national data.

About 48 percent of female domestic homicides in New York state involved an intimate partner in 2016, according to a report from the state Division of Criminal Justice Services. A firearm was used in about a third of all domestic homicides in New York state.

The state data does not include homicides where there was no known relationsh­ip between the suspect and victim.

Our ruling

Cuomo said: “Half of the American women who are murdered are killed by their intimate partners.”

Data collected by the CDC supports Cuomo’s claim. More than half of the female homicides the agency studied involved an intimate partner when the relationsh­ip was known.

We rate his claim True.

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