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Profiles

  • Victoria Elizabeth “Vickie” Cushman (1959 - 1989)
    Vicky, 29, was a victim of homicide. The popular 29-year-old was found by a co-worker in a pool of blood at her home in Warwick, Rhode Island, leaving her community in shock. Her death in August 19...
  • Eleanor Joy Blow (1905 - 1950)
    References Reference: Find A Grave Memorial - SmartCopy : May 6 2017, 1:08:19 UTC
  • Fred Brown (1900 - 1935)
    Male, Black, married, 35 years old. Place of death: Pensacola Hospital. No residence listed. Length of residence in city: 20 years. Spouse: Lula Brown. Occupation: Railroad employee, section hand. Fa...
  • Louis Bragg (1875 - 1925)
    Male, Black, Single, about 50 years old. Place of death: Pensacola Hospital. Last residence: Lukes Alley. Occupation, birthplace, names and birthplaces of parents unknown. Informant: Hospital. Cause ...
  • Anna Theresa Appel (1850 - 1883)
    Newspaper account of her death

Homicide


Please try to start sub projects with the actual cause of death.

{note from morel: I am adding a few profiles here, until we establish how we breakdown homicide death. After that, I will move those profiles into their applicable subprojects.}

Definition

Homicide is the act of a human being causing the death of another human being. There are both unintentional and intentional homicides, and many different types of homicides are generally treated very differently in human societies; such classes of homicide can include murder, abortion, manslaughter, euthanasia, and execution.

Not all homicides are crimes. Many homicides, such as murder and manslaughter, violate criminal laws. Others, such as a killing committed in justified self-defense, are not criminal. Illegal killings range from manslaughter to murder, with multiple degrees of each representing the gravity of the crime.

Word Origin & History

  • homicide "killing," c.1230, from O.Fr. homicide, from L. homicidium, from homo "man" + -cidium "act of killing" (see -cide). The meaning "person who kills" is also from O.Fr., from L. homicida, from -cida "killer."

Leading Methods of Homicide from: Leading Causes of Suicide, Homicide, & Unintentional Death 1999-2015

  • Fire arms = 67%
  • Cut or Pierce = 10.9%
  • Suffocation = 3.5%
  • Transportation = 1.3%
  • Struck by or Against = 1.1%
  • Fire or Burn = 0.7%
  • Poisoning = 0.5%
  • Drowning = 0.3%
  • Fall = 0.1%

Guns are the most commonly used weapons in both murders and suicides, according to the analysis of data from 2007 released on Thursday by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The CDC estimates that 50,000 people die violently every year in the United States. Homicide is the second leading cause of death, after accidents, for 15- to 24-year-olds and the third leading cause of death for children aged 10 to 14, with suicide following right after in both age groups.


Additional Reading:

Jump back to: Cause of death portal (found under: Unnatural death)


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