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Homicide Studies
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A Comparison of Law Enforcement and Medical Examiner Reports in a Violent-Death Surveillance System

Lee Anne Gabor

University of Utah Intermountain Injury Control Research Center

Andrea Genovesi

University of Utah Intermountain Injury Control Research Center

Gitte Y. Larsen

University of Utah Intermountain Injury Control Research Center

Lynne Fullerton-Gleason

University of New Mexico Health Sciences Center

Anna Davis

University of Utah Intermountain Injury Control Research Center

Lenora M. Olson

University of Utah Intermountain Injury Control Research Center, lenora.olson{at}hsc.utah.edu

This study compared information gathered from medical examiner reports to information gathered from law enforcement reports in characterizing incidents of homicide and homicide followed by suicide that were abstracted for a public health violent-death surveillance system. The authors found that law enforcement reports contribute substantively to the surveillance system and often augment or provide additional information to the medical examiner reports. The utility of law enforcement data, particularly the narrative information, must be balanced with the time needed to gather the law enforcement reports and funding limitations. As violent-death surveillance needs grow, linking police and other law enforcement data with medical examiner and other public health data sources will provide a clearer picture of the circumstances relating to homicide and other violent deaths at the state and national level.

Key Words: homicide • suicide • surveillance systems • criminal justice—statistics and numerical data • coroners and medical examiners—statistics and numerical data

Homicide Studies, Vol. 12, No. 3, 249-263 (2008)
DOI: 10.1177/1088767908321534


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