Decapitation: a rare form of postmortem mutilation
Autor: | Roger W. Byard, Calle Winskog |
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Rok vydání: | 2015 |
Předmět: |
Adult
Male Decapitation medicine.medical_specialty Population Poison control 01 natural sciences Suicide prevention Occupational safety and health Pathology and Forensic Medicine 03 medical and health sciences 0302 clinical medicine Homicide Injury prevention medicine Head Injuries Penetrating Humans 030216 legal & forensic medicine education Psychiatry education.field_of_study business.industry 010401 analytical chemistry Human factors and ergonomics General Medicine 0104 chemical sciences Surgery Wounds Gunshot business |
Zdroj: | Forensic Science, Medicine, and Pathology. 12:98-100 |
ISSN: | 1556-2891 1547-769X |
Popis: | Decapitation is an injury rarely encountered in civilian populations. For example, a study of medicolegal autopsies in South Australia (population at the time of approximately 1.5 million) over a 17 year period revealed only 20 cases. Of these, the majority (13; 65 %) were suicides often involving trains, with five deaths from vehicle crashes, and two from industrial accidents. Decapitations accounted for Decapitation after death may be associated with a number of quite different scenarios. Animal predation, usually from dogs feeding, is one of the more commonly occurring events, particularly in elderly recluses who may not be found for some time. Domestic disarray at the death scene and spreading of putrefactive effusion fluid throughout a house may raise suspicions of homicide. Traumatic decapitation from rubbish compactors may occur in newborns abandoned in dumpster. Postmortem mutilation may also be a strong indicator of homicide if there is no obvious explanation from a scene as to how injuries occurred. The reasons for postmortem decapitation are quite varied and may be as straightforward as an attempt to dispose of a body by reducing it to more manageable fragments and to render it less identifiable. Alternatively, cutting a body after death may be a manifestation of significant psychiatric illness in the perpetrator that may be associated with ritualistic and sexual activities. An extreme example was that of a 26-year-old man who stabbed his father to death and then skinned the decapitated head to make a mask for wearing. Ante and postmortem injuries can usually be distinguished by the absence of hemorrhage and vital reaction in injuries that have been inflicted after death, as in the current case. The here reported case demonstrates an example of postmortem mutilation where the head was removed in an attempt to de-identify the body, or else where contempt for the victim had led the perpetrator to remove the head and discard it into a river. However, the absence of other areas of injuries inflicted postmortem and of ritualistic behavior makes de-identification a more likely motive. Although rare in most medicolegal practices the finding of unexplained decapitation raises a number of significant issues regarding the nature of the death and the mental status of the possible perpetrator. Language: en |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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