Parricide A Case Study
Parricide A Case Study
Parricide A Case Study
In Partial Fulfillment
Cagmat, Pretzel M.
April 2022
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ABSTRACT
There are several reasons why people get addicted to drugs, as well as varied levels of
dependence. This case study titled, “Challenges Encountered by a drug offender: A Case
Study” was primarily conducted at Municipality of Molave through face-to-face
interview to assess the offender about the challenges encountered. This study used the
case study analysis of research with the researcher-made guide questions as the data
gathering instrument. The informant of this study is a drug offender. The informant
shared his life challenges as a drug offender.
Keywords: Preventive measures, patrol, promote children’s safety, security, widen their
approach, strategies.
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INTRODUCTION
patricide, which is the murder of one's father, matricide, which is the murder of one's
mother, and double parricide, which is the murder of both parents. It is an uncommon
crime that accounts for a small percentage of all voluntary murders: in Europe and North
America, it occurs around 2-4 percent of the time, with patricide being the most common.
The murder usually takes place in the family home, and the killer and the victim usually
live together. Parricide by children occurs infrequently during violent disputes; rather, it
occurs when the parent is defenseless or when the victim has a low vigilance threshold.
daughter is known as parricide. Cussen and Bryant (2015) examined a recently released
offenders.7Parricide can involve many perpetrators, like in the 2001 case of Sef
Gonzales, who murdered his parents and sister8. In some circumstances, there may be
more than one perpetrator, such as when the victim is a father or uncle and the offender is
a brother or sibling, as in the case of brothers Lyle and Erik Menendez, who murdered
the most serious of family crimes, with the punishment for such a heinous crime against a
thousand cuts.'4 Gabbiani adds that unintentional parricide was not considered to be
lenient under statute 319. Parricide was regarded as such a serious crime that any less
than intentional behavior was judged undesirable. They are obliged to live with their
family members and rely on them financially due to their health difficulties and
inevitable.. Furthermore, adult criminals with serious mental illness typically murder their
physical or sexual abuses perpetrated by their parents Instead, adult aggressors, usually
between thirty and forty years of age, are psychiatric patients who commit the crime as a
unemployed or part-time workers who live with the victim and have inadequate social
CASE 1
This is a 15-year old boy, firstborn of three children and the only male, who lived
in his family, together with his father a 40 year-old blacksmith, currently receiving
and the two sisters (10 and 12 years old respectively). Within the family, there were
many conflicts between the parents, who alternated between separations and
reconciliations, to the point that it became necessary for the Social Services to monitor
the situation. Often the children were involved in violent arguments between the parents
and were instigated by their mother, who was perceived as the main caregiver, to go
In such context, the boy would use a defensive mechanism based on the
detachment and the repression of the events: on one side, he did not appear particularly
distressed towards his father (with whom he had also lived together); on the other side, he
clearly remembered his father's aggressive attacks. With the complicity and the
incitement of his mother, the boy planned the patricide (in the last months before the
crime he had become introverted and reserved towards the social workers) which he
During the detention, the minor displayed indifference to both of his parental
figures and the events that had occurred, and seemed not to be aware of the consequences
of his act; indeed he was hoping that his family could achieve a new balance. During the
stay at the juvenile penal institute, the boy appeared introverted and closed with his peers,
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but at the same time available to establish a relationship with the adults figures, as he
displayed appreciation for the support he was receiving and interest in the occupational
CASE 2
This is a 15-years-old boy, who used to live with his parents and brothers (the
father was 45 years old; his mother was a 40-years-old housewife; a 23 years-old
unemployed brother, a 22 year-old sister with a severe mental retardation and a 10 years-
The father was described as authoritarian, disinterested in the family and violent;
the man used to have two mistresses and at the time of the murder he was under house
arrest because of sexual harassments against a minor girl. Lately, the man was showing
an unhealthy interest for the two dominating mistresses and a will to annihilate the female
family members. On the contrary, the mother was subdued and was used to suffer the
The boy had not completed his education because of his father's interference and
had recently interrupted an affective relationship with a girl in order to protect her against
the violent offences of his father. Moreover, he had recently been forced to face alone,
without the support of his older brother, the increasing aggressiveness of his father. This
situation had lead him to plan the murder, perpetrated with a sawn-off shotgun, in order
to save himself, his sisters and his mother from the violence they had experienced. The
parricide was experienced by the boy also as an attempt to affirm his anti-male
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chauvinism, in contrast of that of his father. After the murder, the boy confessed the
crime and was then sent in preventive custody to a juvenile penal institute because of the
CASE 3
years old. The family included also the mother of 35 years old, employed in a cleaning
company, and two minor brothers of 11 and 4 years old. The girl had grown up in the
North of Italy, and had experienced poor social relationships and school achievement. At
14 years old, she had moved together with her family to the South of Italy, in the native
place of her parents and she had experienced this change in a negative way. Afterwards,
she gave up her studies and started to work with her mother, because her father had
mother as her main attachment figure, whereas she perceived her father as a violent,
nervous, possessive and jealous person. The family environment was described as tense
and not much quiet. Moreover, the minor had started a romantic relationship with a boy,
but she had interrupted it because she suffered from not having enough freedom, as she
With the complicity of her mother and of her maternal grandmother, the adolescent girl at
first poisoned the father with benzodiapezine, and then she strangled him with a nylon
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string. During the detention, the girl appeared calm, respectful of the rules, emotionally
regulated but concerned about the consequences of the crime she had committed.
General Objectives
To identify is this reasons are also the common in other parricide cases.
Specific Question
1. What are the most common reasons for minors to commit parricide?
Research Methods
This section discusses the research design, research setting, the research
respondents, instrument for data collection, and the procedures in gathering data.
Research Design. The researchers employed case study analysis research design.
because it assumed that individuals chosen for the study would be those
who will provide most valuable information (Guarte & Barrios, 2006).
Tangub City only for the purpose to answer the specific questions of this
study.
Research Instruments. The instrument used in gathering the data were the
.
Results and Discussion
As demonstrated by the three example cases, the crime of parricide is almost always
motivated by a desire to end repeated experiences of abuse and maltreatment. Despair drives
these young victims to react against their abusive parents in order to protect themselves and other
vulnerable family members. One of the most common reasons for a minor to commit parricide is
witnessing their father mistreat their mother. And the only way they could stop their father from
hurting their mother was to kill him. This can be witnessed not just in certain cases, but also in
many cases, where a father's kid kills him to protect his mother, who has been physically harmed
several times.
Minors who believe that murdering the abusing figure is the only way to escape years of
physical and psychological abuse are among the most common causes of parricide. The
parricides in this group typically have clean records and have grown up in violent families with
easy access to weapons. These minors appear unable to tolerate family conditions, have poor
social relationships, and can easily lose control under stressful conditions. The crime is
committed while in a dissociative state, which gives the perpetrator a sense of relief (Cooke
2001).
According to Mills (2003) stated that children who are repeatedly punished, criticized,
bad, and unworthy to be loved. These self-image beliefs elicit shame and lead these children,
who continue to be maltreated over time, to develop emotional processes that differ from those
of non-maltreated children and can differ depending on whether the victim is a boy or a girl.
Maltreated minors experience a sense of humiliation and shame for the recurrent abuses,
as they consider them undeserved; the fantasies induced by the feeling of shame seem to favor a
mental state of revenge and an illusion of being powerful which contrast dramatically with the
victim's experience of being actually powerlessness. When this mental state occurs, the abused
minor develops the belief that the murder of the parent is a well justified act and proportional to
the humiliations he/she has experienced. The minors may concentrate themselves on the idea to
take the law into their own hands more than on the consequences of the act. On these premises, it
becomes possible to understand the quietness that minors show before and after the murder, the
lack of remorse, as well as the dissociation that occurs at the time of the murder which had origin
Rationale
The program is to be overlooked in order to fully explain the vital chain of guardianship
of the held upon example. The term "chain of custody" refers to the properly recorded approved
developments and care of held onto narcotics or controlled synthetics from the time of
seizure/seizure to receipt in the legal research institution to supervision to present in court for
destruction.
RECOMMENDATION
1. To the Police Personnel. They should expand their services and hold a seminar to
assist police officers and future police officers in the conduct of drug-related operations. They
also urge that criminology students and future police officers be assisted in gaining appropriate
knowledge and abilities in the preparation of police reports, as these records are extremely
important sources of information regarding the cases filed, the accused, and/or suspects.
2. To the LGU’s. They should provide the PNP Organization with sufficient funding
to cover their demands and enable them to efficiently carry out their obligations. In addition, the
CONCLUSION
Affective deprivation, harshness, and restrictions from one or both parents may cause the
child to have an unbalanced or immature personality. Imbalances and changes in the emotional
domain might jeopardize the development of a developed ego, which allows children to be aware
of the repercussions of their own and others' actions and sensitive enough.
In light of the foregoing, parricide committed by minors who were abused by their
parents can be interpreted as the result of multiple risk factors: early identification of these
factors, both clinically and criminologically or forensically, can prevent the desire for revenge
from manifesting itself in the tragic and irreversible event of the parent's murder.
REFERENCES
Alessandri, S.M., Lewis, M. (1993) Parental Evaluation and Its Relation to Shame and Pride in
Young Children Sex Roles Retrieved from https://bit.ly/39GOW8m
Alessandri, S. & Lewis, M. (1996). Differences in Pride and Shame in Maltreated and Non-
maltreated Pre-schoolers Child Development Retrieved from https://bit.ly/3NtTfmk
Andrews, et. al (2000) Predicting PTSD Symptoms in Victims of Violent Crime The Role of
Shame Anger and Childhood Abuse. Journal of Abnormal
Psychology Retrieved from https://bit.ly/3wD63A1