- Research agenda shifted from dangerousness to victimisation, yet victims of homicides by perpetrators with mental disorders remain underexamined regarding justice and reparation.
- Review of 2,586 Spanish homicide cases found 278 (10.75%) involved perpetrators with mental disorders, predominantly lethal attacks within family settings.
- Most incidents were intrafamilial, including 26.1% parricides, and victims rarely received compensation, urging preventive, victim-oriented institutional responses.
J Forensic Leg Med. 2026 May 21;120:103173. doi: 10.1016/j.jflm.2026.103173. Online ahead of print.
ABSTRACT
In examining the relationship between mental disorder and criminal behavior, the research agenda has shifted substantially from a paradigm of dangerousness to one centered on victimization. However, the impact of homicides perpetrated by individuals with mental disorders on victims-particularly regarding limited access to justice and reparation-has remained largely absent from victimological research. Through a review of 2586 homicide cases adjudicated by Spanish courts, of which 278 (10.75%) involved perpetrators with mental disorders, the distinctive characteristics of these cases were examined. Most involved lethal attacks against family members, with 26.1% constituting parricides. A key finding was that these victims received compensation in only a small number of cases, a disadvantage largely attributable to the intrafamilial nature of most incidents. A further shift in the victimization paradigm may therefore redirect attention toward the specific characteristics of this form of victimization-frequently experienced within the perpetrator’s immediate family circle-and promote a more preventive, victim-oriented institutional and professional response to such cases.
PMID:42176648 | DOI:10.1016/j.jflm.2026.103173
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