4.3 Article

Intimate Partner Violence and Pet Abuse: Responding Law Enforcement Officers' Observations and Victim Reports From the Scene

Journal

JOURNAL OF INTERPERSONAL VIOLENCE
Volume 36, Issue 5-6, Pages 2353-2372

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/0886260518759653

Keywords

domestic violence; sexual assault; intimate partner violence; animal abuse; multidisciplinary collaboration; law enforcement; violent offenders

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The presence of animal abuse in homes where intimate partner violence occurs poses significant risks to all individuals, including pets, residing in these environments. Victims of IPV involving suspects with a history of pet abuse are more likely to be at high risk of suffering serious injury or death, compared to incidents without a history of pet abuse. Collaboration and safety plans addressing the substantial risk of harm for all individuals and animals in the home are essential for effective prevention and intervention strategies.
The risk of harm/injury in homes where intimate partner violence (IPV) occurs is not limited to humans; animals reside in as many as 80% of these homes and may be at substantial risk of suffering severe or fatal injury. Gaining a better understanding of IPV-pet abuse overlap is imperative in more accurately identifying the risks of harm for all individuals and animals residing in these homes. The objectives of this study were to utilize law enforcement officers' observations and IPV victim reports from the scene of the incident to (a) determine the prevalence of pet abuse perpetration among suspects involved in IPV incidents, (b) compare characteristics of IPV incidents and the home environments in which they occur when the suspect has a history of pet abuse with incidents involving suspects with no reported history of pet abuse, and (c) compare IPV incident outcomes involving suspects with a history of pet abuse with those involving suspects with no reported history of pet abuse. IPV victims residing in homes with a suspect who has a history of pet abuse often describe extremely high-risk environments. With nearly 80% reporting concern that they will eventually be killed by the suspect, victims in these environments should be considered at significant risk of suffering serious injury or death. In addition, IPV victims involved in incidents with a suspect that has a history of pet abuse were significantly more likely to have had at least one prior unreported IPV incident with the suspect (80%) and to have ever been strangled (76%) or forced to have sex with the suspect (26%). Effective prevention/detection/intervention strategies are likely to require multidisciplinary collaboration and safety plans that address the susbstantial risk of harm/injury for all adults, children, and animals residing in the home.

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