Study reveals worrying insight into children who kill their parents

According to a new study, a parent’s murder or child killing in Australia – in Australia, about five percent of all murders, many of them, many of them, after an indigenous argument and contain knives.
The Australian Institute of Criminology examined the characteristics of its parria in Australia using 35 years of data from the National Murder Monitoring Program.
Researchers said that the rates in Australia are generally similar to international records, it is rare but permanent.
In Australia, an average of 12 parricine was recorded every year and a total of 429 events for 35 years.
NSW has recorded one -third of the Parrikur, Victoria and Queensland recorded one -fifth of each.
AIC Deputy Director Rick Brown said that the study should take into account this form of violence in the response to family violence.
“Parricide is a significant form of murder with the fact that mothers and fathers are sacrificed in similar proportions,” he said.
“The research also shows that the sons are more likely to kill their fathers and that their daughters are more likely to kill their mothers.”
Most parrisites contained a parent, but contained both parents.
Double Parrisitis was only committed by his sons, almost one of the 10 criminals killed both parents.
The study said that 54 percent of the victims were fathers and 46 percent were mothers and 65 percent were male for all murders in Australia. With a sincere common murder, 76 percent of the victims are women.
Parricide criminals are mainly male and only 14 percent are female.

Some of the more creepy findings were used mainly for murders of blades and other sharp instruments.
“The sons showed some changes in the use of weapons, depending on whether the victim had fathers or mothers,” he wrote.
Other widespread weapons were firearms, as well as blunt instruments and the hands and feet of the criminal.
Almost one -third of the double parricide contained firearms.
The study also found that almost half of the Parrikures committed by their daughters and more than one -third of their sons were a discussion.
Disputes about money made up seven percent of the Parrikur by sons, but by their daughters.

The authors said that the parricans, whom his son’s parent expects or envisaged, said that he would help the financial difficulties or debts with disagreements that he had killed his parents to obtain access to the composition (or recommended changes) or life insurances or assets of his parents, ”he said.
Almost one -fifth of the sons who committed the parrici were delusional at that time, many were not found guilty by mental deterioration, or he was found guilty of the crime of killing less.
At that time, only eight percent of his daughters were experiencing psychosis.
“Parricide continues to be a relatively rare event in Australia, but it is still a stable event,” he said. “In the response to family violence and under conditions in which non -fatal violence are directed to a parent, there is more need to take into account this fatal form of violence.”

