DIFFERENTIATING SEXUAL
VIOLENCE:
A COMPARISON OF SEXUAL
HOMICIDE AND RAPE
C. Gabrielle Salfati and Paul Taylor
ABSTRACT
The present study sought to identify
consistent patterns in the actions of sexually violent offenders to determine
whether sexual homicide and rape reflect different behavioral emphasis of a
single thematic model of sexual assault. Crime scene behaviors of 74 (37 sexual
homicides and 37 rapes) solved cases of sexual assaults were compared, and
results of a multi-dimensional analysis revealed three thematic styles of
interacting with the victim during a sexual assault (Exploit, Control, and
Violent). Further analysis indicated that offender-victim interactions in
sexual homicide and rape are predominantly distinguished by the degree of violence,
such that behaviors associated with each type of offense were found to occur in
two discrete areas along a single continuum. Findings are discussed in terms of
producing a general framework for understanding sexual violent interactions.