Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Women in their high-school years to their mid-20s are nearly three times as vulnerable to attack by a husband, boyfriend or former partner as those in other age groups, a Bureau of Justice Statistics study shows.
But domestic violence victims between the ages of 35 and 49 are most likely to be killed, the Justice Department said Sunday, citing statistics from 1999.
Julie Fulcher, director of public policy for the National Coalition Against Domestic Violence, said her group’s experience shows younger women are indeed at higher risk. She said their slightly older counterparts are probably more likely to die at the hands of a partner because they are more likely to live with their abusers, leaving them more exposed to their violence.
"We do know that domestic violence as a pattern of behavior tends to … escalate over time," Fulcher said. "Domestic violence doesn’t generally begin on a first date. It begins with some controlling behaviors."
There were a total of 791,210 "intimate partner violence" victims in 1999. Eighty-five percent of the attacks were against women, including 1,218 murders, 91,470 rapes and sexual assaults, 65,970 robberies, 68,810 aggravated assaults and 444,860 simple assaults, the report said.
The report defined "intimates" as current or former husbands or wives, boyfriends or girlfriends, or same-sex partners.
Overall, six women out of 1,000 were victims of domestic violence in 1999 — a 41 percent decrease since 1993, mirroring a nationwide crime drop over the decade.
"But the rate of violence against intimate partners did not go down as much as other crimes," said Justice statistician Callie Rennison, the report’s author. "It tells me that this is perhaps a more stubborn problem."
Other findings in the report:
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