Apportioning Culpability in Multiple Perpetrator Acts of Terrorism

The Depravity Standard instrument was developed to operationalize depraved elements of crimes. It consists of 25items that were derived using multiple sources of data, including case reviews, input from professionals, and over 40,000 survey respondents. This paper presents preliminary data on the us...

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Main Authors: Kate Y. O’Malley, James D. Seward, Michael Welner
Format: Article
Language:Arabic
Published: Naif University Publishing House 2017-12-01
Series:Arab Journal of Forensic Sciences & Forensic Medicine
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.nauss.edu.sa/index.php/AJFSFM/article/view/392
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author Kate Y. O’Malley
James D. Seward
Michael Welner
author_facet Kate Y. O’Malley
James D. Seward
Michael Welner
author_sort Kate Y. O’Malley
collection DOAJ
description The Depravity Standard instrument was developed to operationalize depraved elements of crimes. It consists of 25items that were derived using multiple sources of data, including case reviews, input from professionals, and over 40,000 survey respondents. This paper presents preliminary data on the use of the Depravity Standard in cases with multiple perpetrators, examining its efficacy in differentiating the culpability of co-conspirators in a terrorist act. The US has been the site of three high-profile terrorist events with dual perpetrators: the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing by ex-U.S. Military acquaintances Timothy McVeigh and Terry Nichols; the 2013 Boston Marathon bombing by brothers Tamerlan and Dzhokhar Tsarnaev; and the 2015 San Bernardino mass shooting by husband and wife Syed Rizwan Farook and Tashfeen Malik. In this pilot project, two independent raters applied the 25 items of the Depravity Standard to each of the six perpetrators to determine which of each pair was the more culpable. Interclass correlation coefficients revealed a high degree of agreement between the raters, attesting to the reliability of the Depravity Standard items. Examination of the total number of Depravity Standard items present reveals McVeigh was more culpable than Nichols. The other four perpetrators were similarly culpable to their partners. These current findings indicate that the Depravity Standard is a promising instrument to determine comparative culpability in terrorist actions with multiple perpetrators. Ongoing analyses of public participation data indicate some items to be more indicative of depravity than others, and future analyses will compare weighted scores.     Keywords: forensic science, crime severity, the Depravity Standard, terrorism, criminal culpability
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spelling doaj.art-f95548d8d206434cbec7dea385b6d0152024-03-12T12:28:08ZaraNaif University Publishing HouseArab Journal of Forensic Sciences & Forensic Medicine1658-67861658-67942017-12-011610.26735/16586794.2017.008142Apportioning Culpability in Multiple Perpetrator Acts of TerrorismKate Y. O’Malley0James D. Seward1Michael Welner2The Forensic Panel 224 West 30th Street, Suite 806 New York, NY 10001The Forensic Panel 224 West 30th Street, Suite 806 New York, NY 10001The Forensic Panel 224 West 30th Street, Suite 806 New York, NY 10001The Depravity Standard instrument was developed to operationalize depraved elements of crimes. It consists of 25items that were derived using multiple sources of data, including case reviews, input from professionals, and over 40,000 survey respondents. This paper presents preliminary data on the use of the Depravity Standard in cases with multiple perpetrators, examining its efficacy in differentiating the culpability of co-conspirators in a terrorist act. The US has been the site of three high-profile terrorist events with dual perpetrators: the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing by ex-U.S. Military acquaintances Timothy McVeigh and Terry Nichols; the 2013 Boston Marathon bombing by brothers Tamerlan and Dzhokhar Tsarnaev; and the 2015 San Bernardino mass shooting by husband and wife Syed Rizwan Farook and Tashfeen Malik. In this pilot project, two independent raters applied the 25 items of the Depravity Standard to each of the six perpetrators to determine which of each pair was the more culpable. Interclass correlation coefficients revealed a high degree of agreement between the raters, attesting to the reliability of the Depravity Standard items. Examination of the total number of Depravity Standard items present reveals McVeigh was more culpable than Nichols. The other four perpetrators were similarly culpable to their partners. These current findings indicate that the Depravity Standard is a promising instrument to determine comparative culpability in terrorist actions with multiple perpetrators. Ongoing analyses of public participation data indicate some items to be more indicative of depravity than others, and future analyses will compare weighted scores.     Keywords: forensic science, crime severity, the Depravity Standard, terrorism, criminal culpabilityhttps://journals.nauss.edu.sa/index.php/AJFSFM/article/view/392forensic sciencecrime severitythe depravity standardterrorismcriminal culpability
spellingShingle Kate Y. O’Malley
James D. Seward
Michael Welner
Apportioning Culpability in Multiple Perpetrator Acts of Terrorism
Arab Journal of Forensic Sciences & Forensic Medicine
forensic science
crime severity
the depravity standard
terrorism
criminal culpability
title Apportioning Culpability in Multiple Perpetrator Acts of Terrorism
title_full Apportioning Culpability in Multiple Perpetrator Acts of Terrorism
title_fullStr Apportioning Culpability in Multiple Perpetrator Acts of Terrorism
title_full_unstemmed Apportioning Culpability in Multiple Perpetrator Acts of Terrorism
title_short Apportioning Culpability in Multiple Perpetrator Acts of Terrorism
title_sort apportioning culpability in multiple perpetrator acts of terrorism
topic forensic science
crime severity
the depravity standard
terrorism
criminal culpability
url https://journals.nauss.edu.sa/index.php/AJFSFM/article/view/392
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AT michaelwelner apportioningculpabilityinmultipleperpetratoractsofterrorism