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Criminal Justice Review
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Notes

The Utility of Correctional Data for Understanding the Drugs-Homicide Connection

Barry Spunt

Chaim Tarshish

Michael Fendrich,

Paul Goldstein

Henry Brownstein

Research on the drugs-homicide connection is hampered by data sources that have only limited utility. Following a review of these data sources, this paper examines the drug-relatedness of a sample of homicides perpetrated in New York State as revealed in a specialized correctional department data base. Drug-relatedness is defined according to a tripartite model of the general relationship between drugs and violence. Even though the corrections data base incorporates detailed quantitaive and qualitative data from a variety of criminal justice sources, it was found that drug-relatedness was probably underestimated in the data base. About a quarter of the homicides were clearly drug-related. About two thirds were classified as not drug-related, although some of them may have been. In 10 percent of the cases there was an indication of drug-relatedness but there was not sufficient information to make a classification according to the model. The paper ends by assessing the utility of this correctional data base for understanding the drugs-homicide relationship.

Criminal Justice Review, Vol. 18, No. 1, 46-60 (1993)
DOI: 10.1177/073401689301800105


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