Friday, June 5, 2026
ADVT 
National

'Intimacy Discount:' Sentences Lighter For Men Who Kill Female Partners

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 22 Nov, 2015 01:25 PM
    TORONTO — Men who kill their female partners are more likely to be criminally convicted than men accused of killing strangers — but they also tend to get lighter sentences, a Canadian study concludes.
     
    The research, being published in the journal "Current Sociology," finds that men who kill their wives, girlfriends or other female family members are handed shorter prison terms than men who kill strangers.
     
    In fact, according to the findings, men who kill women they know are treated more leniently at most stages of the criminal-justice process, such as facing fewer charges of first-degree murder.
     
    Study author Myrna Dawson, an associate sociology professor at the University of Guelph, calls it the "intimacy discount."
     
    "This may mean that women killed by male partners are still seen as property and, as such, these femicides are not treated as seriously as other femicides," the study states.
     
    Another factor at play could be that femicide of a partner or family member is typically seen as a spontaneous "crime of passion" or the result of victim provocation.
     
    "Despite the dominance of these beliefs, there has been little examination of the validity of resulting stereotypes," Dawson told The Canadian Press. "Some exploratory research has shown that premeditation or intent is actually more likely in cases involving men who kill female partners."
     
    Perhaps counterintuitively, given the lighter sentences, the study found that men who kill intimate partners are convicted at rates three times higher than men who kill female strangers.
     
     
    Crimes involving relatives tend to be easier both to solve and prosecute, research suggests. The shorter sentences could therefore be due to charges that are more often reduced in exchange for guilty pleas.
     
    "Understanding whether the plea process or common stereotypes associated with intimacy and violence explain this relationship (between convictions and sentencing) is a crucial next step and one that I am currently examining," Dawson said.
     
    "Court actors — judges, Crown attorneys, defence lawyers — are professionals but they are also members of the public (so) how they see these crimes is key."
     
    For her journal article "Punishing femicide: criminal justice responses to the killing of women over four decades," Dawson analyzed Ontario homicide cases between 1974 and 2013, a period in which men killed at least 1,381 women — roughly one femicide every 10 days. She reviewed coroner's records, police reports and court files to look at criminal charges, guilty pleas and prison sentences.
     
    A key finding was the "female victim effect," a corroboration of previous American research: Men who kill women are generally treated more harshly than when they kill other men, with those who kill female strangers facing the most severe punishment, particularly at sentencing.
     
    Researchers disagree on why this happens. One idea is that it may be because femicide often occurs in conjunction with a sexual assault, seen as a significant aggravating factor. Another is that the justice system views women as more vulnerable and in greater need of protection.
     
     
    Dawson, who is Canada research chair in public policy in criminal justice, notes that women remain at far higher risk of being killed by someone they know than by a stranger — one in 10 femicides are perpetrated by strangers. Statistics also show Canadian men kill other men at about twice the rate they kill woman.
     
    Overall, Canada's homicide rate has been declining steadily for decades, in large part due to a sharp fall in "domestic" killings, statistics indicate.
     
    "There have been changes over time in how the courts respond to femicide, supporting a tentative conclusion that legislative and policy changes may be contributing to improved social and legal responses to these crimes in Canada," the study states.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Ackman Backs Valeant Ceo After Reports Of Earlier Doubts Cause Shares To Plunge

    Ackman Backs Valeant Ceo After Reports Of Earlier Doubts Cause Shares To Plunge
    MONTREAL — Activist investor Bill Ackman says he still has faith Valeant's CEO, hours after investors apparently reacted to publication of his earlier doubts by sending the company's stock to a more than two-year low.

    Ackman Backs Valeant Ceo After Reports Of Earlier Doubts Cause Shares To Plunge

    Canada Lets Detained Anti-radicalization Activist Mourad Benchellali Leave For France

    Canada Lets Detained Anti-radicalization Activist Mourad Benchellali Leave For France
    Mourad Benchellali flew back to France late Wednesday, two days after Canadian immigration authorities refused to allow the former Guantanamo inmate into the country for a speaking tour.

    Canada Lets Detained Anti-radicalization Activist Mourad Benchellali Leave For France

    Global Climate Change Poll Suggests Canada Not Too Worried

    Global Climate Change Poll Suggests Canada Not Too Worried
    The study from the Pew Research Centre found Canada is among the 40 countries where most people agree that global warming is a very serious problem.

    Global Climate Change Poll Suggests Canada Not Too Worried

    Pan Am Games Within $2.4-billion Budget, Ontario Government Says

    Pan Am Games Within $2.4-billion Budget, Ontario Government Says
    TORONTO — The Ontario government says this summer’s Pan Am and Parapan Am Games came within the $2.4-billion budget.

    Pan Am Games Within $2.4-billion Budget, Ontario Government Says

    Canada's New Defence Minister Harjit Singh Sajjan Is Used To Dealing With Tough Characters

    Canada's New Defence Minister Harjit Singh Sajjan Is Used To Dealing With Tough Characters
    When Harjit Singh Sajjan went to join the Canadian military 26 years ago, he was rejected by the first unit where he applied. But he stuck it out 

    Canada's New Defence Minister Harjit Singh Sajjan Is Used To Dealing With Tough Characters

    Richmond's Secret Decorator Mulls Seasonal Surprise As Minister Seeks Wreathed Lion Return To Bridge

    Richmond's Secret Decorator Mulls Seasonal Surprise As Minister Seeks Wreathed Lion Return To Bridge
    Each Christmas, for more than 16 years, Mauro Azzano secretly hung wreaths and bows around the necks of the huge stone lions at the south end of the Lions Gate Bridge, connecting Vancouver and the North Shore.

    Richmond's Secret Decorator Mulls Seasonal Surprise As Minister Seeks Wreathed Lion Return To Bridge