Korean J Leg Med.  2000 May;24(1):13-19.

A Forensic Psychiatric Study for Stalking Offenders

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Psychiatry, the National Forensic Psychiatric Hospital, Ministry of Justice, Korea.

Abstract

OBJECT: This study was devised to examine the demographic characteristics, behaviors, psychopathology and associated crimes of stalking offenders.
METHODS
It concerned 50 stalking offenders referred to the National Forensic Psychiatric Hospital for the forensic evaluation.
RESULTS
Most of the stalking offenders were men(78.0%, N=39), and many were unemployed(74.0%, N=37),;70.0%(N=35) had lived alone and they committed the serious crime. Victims included the colleagues or acquaintances(48.0%, N=24), past intimate persons(22.0%, N=11), stars or celebrities(16.0%, N=8), and strangers(14.0%, N=7). The duration of stalking was from 2 month to 20 years (mean= 37.7 month). Three types of stalking offenders were: love obsessional type, delusional type and revenge type. Delusional disorder(40.0%, N=20) was the most frequent, and the next frequent was schizophrenia(22.0%, N=11).
CONCLUSION
Most stalking offenders found single and socially isolated male, and tend to attack the victim directly or indirectly. Appropriate legal and therapeutic interventions are necessary in order to prevent such serious crime as stalking.

Keyword

Stalking; Mentally disordered offender; Crime

MeSH Terms

Crime
Criminals*
Delusions
Hospitals, Psychiatric
Humans
Love
Male
Obsessive Behavior
Psychopathology
Stalking*
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