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Journal of Interpersonal Violence
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Predicting the Recidivism of Mentally Disordered Firesetters

MARNIE E. RICE

Mental Health Centre, Penetanguishene, Ontario

GRANT T. HARRIS

Mental Health Centre, Penetanguishene, Ontario

The psychiatric literature has asserted that arsonists are a particularly dangerous group of mentally disordered offenders with a high likelihood of setting further fires, yet the scant empirical data do not support that contention. We examined the postrelease firesetting, violent, and nonviolent recidivism of 208 male firesetters who had been admitted to a maximum security psychiatric hospital. In an average period of 7.8 years at risk, 16% set another fire, 31% committed a violent offense, 57% committed a nonviolent offense, and 66% exhibited some form of recidivism. In general, personal characteristics that predicted firesetting recidivism were quite different from those that predicted nonviolent outcome and very different from those that predicted violent recidivism.

Journal of Interpersonal Violence, Vol. 11, No. 3, 364-375 (1996)
DOI: 10.1177/088626096011003004


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Journal of Contemporary Criminal JusticeHome page
J. A. DAVIS and K. M. LAUBER
Criminal Behavioral Assessment of Arsonists, Pyromaniacs, and Multiple Firesetters: The Burning Question
Journal of Contemporary Criminal Justice, August 1, 1999; 15(3): 273 - 290.
[Abstract] [PDF]