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Domestic Homicide Reports

Domestic Homicides and Suspected Victim Suicides 2022-2023

This is the third annual report from the national Domestic Homicide Project which works across England and Wales. It is a Home Office funded research project led by the National Police Chiefs' Council (NPCC) and delivered by the Vulnerability Knowledge and Practice Programme (VKPP) in collaboration with the College of Policing. Academics, including staff from the University of Central Lancashire (UCLan) seconded to the VKPP, have led the research in partnership with police.

The report examines all deaths identified by police as domestic abuse related to improve understanding of risk indicators, victim and perpetrator demographics. The unique dataset collects detailed information on these deaths not available from any other source to help police and partners improve their response to domestic abuse, domestic homicide and victim suicide following domestic abuse.

As well as providing detailed analysis of domestic abuse related deaths, the project also worked with bereaved families of victims, who continue to be a key driver for change across the criminal justice system.

Key findings from the report

A total of 242 domestic abuse related deaths were recorded between April 2022 to March 2023, including:

  • 93 suspected victim suicide following domestic abuse (SVSDA)
  • 80 intimate partner homicides (IPH)
  • 31 adult family homicides (AFH)
  • 23 unexpected deaths
  • 11 child deaths
  • 4 ‘other’ deaths (individuals living together who are not family members or intimate partners)

Victim and suspect demographics remained consistent with previous years, with the majority of victims being female aged 25-54 years old, and majority of perpetrators being male and of the same age bracket.

The number of victims and perpetrators of ethnic minority heritages remain slightly over-represented compared with the general population.

Four in five perpetrators were known to police before the homicide occurred, three in five for domestic abuse, and over a third were known to other agencies, demonstrating the need for a multi-agency approach to effectively safeguard victims.

Across the three years of data recorded by the project, around 10% of suspects were recorded as either currently or previously having been managed by police or probation.

Key indicators of risk present in the perpetrator’s history consistently include: controlling and coercive behaviour, mental ill health, alcohol use, drug use and separation/ending of the relationship.

Suspected victim suicides

The number of suspected victim suicides following domestic abuse has overtaken intimate partner homicides for the first time, which is likely due to increased awareness and improvements in recording information by officers, reflecting the progress made by forces following recommendations made by the project’s year two report.

Action has been taken since the second report to train and better equip officers in coercive control and to apply an investigative mindset when attending unexpected or sudden deaths; guidance to police in attending unexpected deaths, including suspected suicides, has been updated; and more Real Time Suicide Surveillance (RTSS) systems are being established by forces to work with partners on suicide prevention.

The report has also highlighted how forces need to continue to improve their approach to suspected victim suicides, including by recognising the high risk posed by coercive and controlling behaviour, speaking to family and friends to establish any history of domestic abuse, embedding professional curiosity attending unexpected deaths, and prosecuting perpetrators for domestic abuse after a victim’s suicide.

RTSS are information-sharing systems which allow police and local partners (e.g. health) to track suspected suicides in near real time, rather than waiting for the formal outcome of a coronial process. They allow local areas to better identify and understand suspected suicides to put in place preventative and support measures.

Read Executive Summary: Domestic Homicides and Suspected Victim Suicides Year 3 Report (2020-2023)

Read Domestic Homicides and Suspected Victim Suicides 2022-2023 Report

Read Glossary of acronyms and terms for main report

 

Domestic Homicides and Suspected Victim Suicides 2021-2022

This is the second annual report from the national Domestic Homicide Project which works across England and Wales. The Domestic Homicide Project is a Home Office funded research project led by the National Police Chiefs' Council (NPCC) and delivered by the Vulnerability Knowledge and Practice Programme (VKPP) in collaboration with the College of Policing. Academics, including staff from the University of Central Lancashire (UCLan) seconded to the VKPP, have led the research in partnership with police.

The report focusses on how policing can improve its response to domestic abuse and domestic homicide, and presents ground-breaking new work on victim suicide after domestic abuse.

Read Year 2 Domestic Homicides and Suspected Victim Suicides 2021-2022 Report

Domestic Homicides and Suspected Victim Suicides 2020-2021

The Domestic Homicide Project was established by National Police Chiefs’ Council and the College of Policing working with and hosted by the VKPP. The project was created in May 2020 through additional Home Office funding to collect, review, and share quick-time learning from all police-recorded domestic homicides and suspected suicides of individuals with a known history of domestic abuse victimisation during the Covid-19 pandemic.

The research carried out by the Project is the first police-led work of its kind in England and Wales and aimed to establish the impact of the Covid-19 and related restrictions on domestic homicides and suspected suicides with a known history of domestic abuse victimisation and learn lessons from every tragic death to help to prevent future deaths.

The project adopts a wide definition of domestic abuse-related deaths, and also includes child deaths in a domestic setting, unexplained or suspicious deaths and suspected suicides of individuals with a known history of domestic abuse victimisation. This expanded definition has enabled relevant deaths to be identified and the data of key sub-groups of cases to be analysed.

Evidence from the project showed that domestic homicides didn’t appear to increase dramatically during the pandemic, with 163 recorded in the 12 months to 31 March 2021.  The Project also found 38 suspected victim suicides with a known history of domestic abuse, although this figure couldn’t be compared with previous years as this was the first time that the data had been captured in this way.  

The Project found that Covid-19 acted as an ‘escalator and intensifier of existing abuse’ in some instances, with victims less able to seek help due to Covid restrictions. It also concluded that Covid had not ‘caused’ domestic homicide but had been ‘weaponised’ by some abusers as both a new tool of control over victims, and – in some cases – as an excuse or defence for abuse or homicide of the victim.

Read Year 1 Domestic Homicides and Suspected Victim Suicides 2020-2021 Report