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"Murder-Suicide" or "Murder-Accident"?: Difficulties with the Analysis of Cases

NCJ Number
232593
Journal
Journal of Forensic Sciences Volume: 55 Issue: 5 Dated: September 2010 Pages: 1375-1377
Author(s)
Roger W. Byard, M.D.; David Veldhoen; Hilton Kobus, Ph.D.; Karen Heath, M.B.B.S.
Date Published
September 2010
Length
3 pages
Annotation
This article reviews two cases of possible murder-suicides.
Abstract
Homicide where a perpetrator is found dead adjacent to the victim usually represents murder-suicide. Two incidents are reported to demonstrate characteristic features in one, and alternative features in the other, that indicate differences in the manner of death. (i) A 37-year-old mother was found dead in a burnt out house with her two young sons in an adjacent bedroom. Deaths were due to incineration and inhalation of products of combustion. (ii) A 39-year-old woman was found stabbed to death in a burnt out house with her 39-year-old de facto partner deceased from the combined effects of incineration and inhalation of products of combustion. The first incident represented a typical murder-suicide, however, in the second incident, the perpetrator had tried to escape through a window and had then sought refuge in a bathroom under a running shower. Murder-accident rather than murder-suicide may therefore be a more accurate designation for such cases. (Published Abstract)