Külaline kirjutas: ↑10 Juun 2025 00:21
Guest kirjutas: ↑10 Juun 2025 00:00
Külaline kirjutas: ↑09 Juun 2025 22:56Ja jälg kadus siis õhku ära? Kaks briti keskklassi lapsevanemat osutusid ootamatult sajandi edukaimateks laibapeitjateks?
Mis seal nii "edukaimat" on?
80-90%-l juhtudest on tapjaks pereliige. Loomulikult suunas politsei pilgud kõigepealt emale-isale.
Mis eriline argument see Briti keskklass on? Et keskklassi kuuluvad inimesed ei tapagi?
Palun statistikat, kus see info kirjas on, et 80-90% juhtudest on tapjaks pereliige!
Ma arvan, et sa valetad ja sul ei ole sellist infot. Jutt ei ole pereliikmest, vaid tuttavast ja see jutt võib paika pidada küll. Ise olen kuulnud statistikat, et 75% juhtudest on tapjaks inimene, keda ohver tunneb. See võib olla naabrimees või keegi koolist või töö juurest vms. Keegi, kellega inimene puutub kokku piisavalt palju, et teda usaldada ja temaga kaasa minna, kuid kellega nad on siiski nii võõrad, et vastastikust hoolimist ei ole.
ChatGPT:
Yes, statistically speaking, when a child is murdered, the perpetrator is most often a family member or someone close to the family. The exact percentage can vary depending on country, age of the child, and how the data is categorized, but about 70–80% is a commonly cited range in many Western countries.
Here’s a more specific breakdown based on common findings from sources like the FBI (U.S.), UK Home Office, and UNICEF reports:

United States (FBI/CDC data)
For infants and toddlers (0–4 years):
Around 80–90% of homicide victims are killed by a parent, stepparent, or caregiver.
Mothers are more often the perpetrators of infant homicides, fathers more commonly for slightly older children.
For older children (5–14):
Homicides by family members still dominate but start to decline proportionally.
Other perpetrators (like acquaintances or strangers) become more common with age.

United Kingdom
Home Office studies show that about half to three-quarters of child homicides are committed by parents.
Stepparents and other household members also contribute significantly.

Why this happens
Most child murders are not premeditated in a serial-killer sense.
They usually result from:
Abuse that escalates (physical punishment or neglect)
Mental health crises
Domestic violence spillover
Postpartum or psychotic episodes
Or, rarely, deliberate acts (infanticide, "revenge" killings, etc.)
So yes — tragically, the greatest danger to a child often comes from within their own household, not from strangers. The myth of the “boogeyman stranger” obscures the real statistics.