Fort Bragg Tragedies Focus Attention on National Plague of Murder-Suicide

For Release:  Monday, August 5, 2002

VPC Study Documents Six Months of Murder-Suicides Across Nation, Finds Guns Used in 95 Percent of All Murder-Suicides, Estimates That at Least 1,300 Lives Lost Each Year to Murder-Suicide 

Study Finds That 73.7 Percent of All Murder-Suicides Involved an Intimate Partner – Of These, 93.5 percent Were Females Killed by Their Intimate Partners

WASHINGTON, DC – At least 662 Americans died in murder-suicides during the first half of 2001, and almost all (94.5 percent) were killed with firearms, according to American Roulette: The Untold Story of Murder-Suicide in the United States, a recent study by the Violence Policy Center (VPC). Since June 11, 2002, two Fort Bragg soldiers have killed their wives and themselves.

The VPC study, based on news clips collected nationwide, is one of the largest and most comprehensive studies ever conducted on murder-suicide. Using the VPC figures, more than 1,300 Americans die each year in murder-suicides. During the six-month study period, 20 North Carolina residents were killed in murder-suicides. The study notes that murder-suicides range from high-profile mass shootings like the April 20, 1999, Columbine massacre to familial shootings claiming the lives of spouses and offspring.

Josh Sugarmann, VPC executive director, states, “Guns are the catalytic component in murder-suicide. Just as important, it must be understood that the emotional factors that drive suicide can be all too easily turned outward on friends, family, co-workers, and complete strangers because of the unmatched lethality of firearms. Every major murder-suicide study ever conducted has shown that a firearm – with its unmatched combination of lethality and availability – is the weapon most often used to murder the victims, with the offenders then turning the gun on themselves.”

For the study, the VPC used a national clipping service to collect every reported murder-suicide in the United States from January 1, 2001 to June 30, 2001. Currently there is no national tracking system for these incidents. As a result, the VPC study provides the most accurate portrait of murder-suicide in America possible.

Seven states had more than 10 murder-suicide incidents during the study period: Florida (35), California (29) and Texas (29), Pennsylvania (17), New York (14), Virginia (12), and Ohio (11). North Carolina had nine murder-suicide incidents.

 

 

 

About the Violence Policy Center
The Violence Policy Center is a national educational organization working to stop gun death and injury. Follow the VPC on TwitterFacebook, and YouTube.

Media Contact:
Georgia Seltzer
(202) 822-8200 x104
gseltzer@vpc.org