MULTIPLE MURDER AND THE MEDIA - A STUDY OF THE REPORTING OF MULTIPLE MURDER IN THE TIMES (1887-1990)

Citation
L. Danson et K. Soothill, MULTIPLE MURDER AND THE MEDIA - A STUDY OF THE REPORTING OF MULTIPLE MURDER IN THE TIMES (1887-1990), JOURNAL OF FORENSIC PSYCHIATRY, 7(1), 1996, pp. 114-129
Citations number
11
Categorie Soggetti
Psychiatry
ISSN journal
09585184
Volume
7
Issue
1
Year of publication
1996
Pages
114 - 129
Database
ISI
SICI code
0958-5184(1996)7:1<114:MMATM->2.0.ZU;2-1
Abstract
This study of The Times over a hundred years (1887-1990) identified re ports of 2,274 cases of murder of which 237 (or 10 per cent) involved multiple killing. Up until the last decade (1980-90) multiple killing was primarily a familial matter. It further emerged that during the fo ur years 1887-90, around the time of the original Ripper cases, there was an early use of reports from abroad which obscured the reality of multiple killing in England. From the mid-1890s to the mid-1970s the r emarkable feature is the paucity of reports of multiple killings in Th e Times. However, the finding of the incredible rise in reports of mul tiple killings taking place outside the family context in the most rec ent decade (1980-90) shows that they are much more widespread than the crimes of child murder and serial killing which have been highlighted by the media. The theoretical puzzle to confront is why the phenomeno n of multiple killing has recently expanded in so many guises.