NCJ Number
79177
Journal
Social Problems Volume: 28 Issue: 5 Dated: (June 1981) Pages: 582-594
Date Published
1981
Length
13 pages
Annotation
The study tested three competing police decision models on 905 sexual assault complaints to police in a large, mid-western city over 6 years to determine what factors affect police processing decisions.
Abstract
The legal model suggests that police do not discriminate between victims on the basis of extralegal attributes; the extralegal model suggests that they do discriminate; and the change model asserts that reliance on extralegal determinants declines with growing awareness of rape as a social problem. The data show that legal determinants dominantly affected arrest, charge seriousness, and felony screening. Suspects received more serious outcomes when the victim was able to identify a suspect and was able to testify, when the incident included sexual penetration and a weapon, and when charges were more serious. Extralegal variables and reorganization of the police department had less effect than legal variables on all three police decisions. Tables, footnotes, and 46 references are included. (Author abstract modified)