Violence Risk Assessment Notes
Violence Risk Assessment Notes
You will always know less than you think you do about the patients or clients you examine
There are abrnomal human behaviours that mental health treatment can’t fix
Unknown data comes in 2 forms:
o Information withheld and known to affect violence risk
o Information withheld and unknown to affect violence risk
Biopsychosocial Model
Individual/Psychological
o Male (Static)
Testosterone correlates w/violence
o 15-24 (Static)
o Past history of violence: frequency, recency, severity (Static)
Most people only ever commit one murder
Motivation for violence
Emotional and behavioural consequences
When you read “torture” consider sexual sadism
o Paranoia (Static or Dynamic)
Command hallucinations easy to fake
Usually resisted
Occur intermittently
Assume they’re their imagination
Coping strategy to manage
Persecution dominance threat insertion (PDI), greatest risk for violence
Most people with schizophrenia attack family – rarely flee or conceal
Paranoid PD
Searching for hidden meaning
Do not laugh or cry, open to vulnerability
Believes violence is rational
False victimization syndrome affects 2% of people who believe they’re being
stalked when they’re not
Psychostimulants can leave individuals paranoid up to 6 months after last use
o Intelligence below average (Static)
Most criminally incarcerated people have lower Iqs than average
IQ does not correlate with psychopathy
Verbal IQ is lower than performance IQ in delinquents
Aggression in people with mental retardation is higher than those with normal
IQs this is because they have less ability to think of alternatives
Physical arousal precedes violence
o Anger/fear problems
Frequency
Intensity, describe it
What does the person do when they get angry?
Ego dystonic or ego systonic
o Psychopathy and other attachment problems (Static)
Most serial rapists are psychopaths, most stalkers are not
Relationship b/w attachment pathology and violence
Who raised you?
How would you describe them as parents?
Whom did you feel safest with as a child?
What were your earliest memories?
Social/Environmental Domain
o Family of origin violence (Static)
Impulsive to overcontrolled
MMPI-2, MCMI-III, Rorschach blunted violence
o Adolescent peer group violence (Dynamic)
Boy Scouts, 4H Club
Gangs
o Economic instability/poverty
Poverty is associated with increased criminal activity
Sudden loss of income can increase
o Weapons history (static), skill, interest and approach behaviour (dynamic)
Approach Behaviour What the person does if they want a weapon but can’t
get one
Assessment questions
Have you ever owned or possessed a weapon?
Who gave it to you?
How old were you?
What did you do with it?
Who taught you how to use the weapons?
Over what period of time did you use the weapon?
Did you get any formal training (police, military, private) in its use?
How skilled do you think you are?
Are you still interested?
Do you have any? (Home, work, etc.)
Do you think you’ll want to own one when you can? (e.g. money)
Why should I believe you?
Person who wants a weapon but can’t have one will often pursue other media
(websites, video games, movies, etc.) that supports that view
Watch for a change in behaviour
o Victim pool (Dynamic)
How many future victims?
Anything to help me get a picture of future victims?
Victim characteristics
Perpetrator characteristics
Relational characteristics
Important to assess fantasy (what does the sexual sadist masturbate to now?)
o Alcohol and/or psychostimulant use (Dynamic)
Involved in most homicides, reduces serotonin
Psychostimulants increase autonomic arousal
o Popular culture (Static)
Violence conditioned sexual stimulus
Biological Domain
o Pay close attention to first year of life for CNS issues
o History of CNS trauma (Static)
Have you ever had an injury to your head? What happened?
If you did have a head injury ,did you go to the hospital or see the doctor?
Have you ever lost consciousness? If yes, when and for how long?
Have you ever had any seizures or taken medications for seizures?
Have you or members of your immediate family ever been diagnosed with a
brain disease or disorder
o CNS signs and symptoms (Static or dynamic)
Client reports (symptoms) or observed (signs)
Combining symptoms that don’t occur, exaggerrating or absurd symptoms
o Objective CNS measures (Static or dynamic)
If you see CNS trauma or CNS signs and symptoms you should refer to
neurologist and neuropsychologist
Warnings:
Forensic Psych may over-interpret neurological imaging
Genuine brain abnormalities may not be related to violence
o Did it exist when the illness ocurred?
o Did it cause the illness?
Biology is always mediated by social and psychological factors
Make a reasonable attempt for a referral even if you’re not able to get it
completed
o Major mental disorder (Dynamic)
Axis I
Treatments of Psychiatric Disorders, Second Ed.
Synopsis of Treatments of Psychiatric Disorders, Second Ed.
Small but significant contribution
Predatory vs Affective Violence
Psychopathy
PCL-R to measure
Libness
o Take the client into an area where you have expertise
Grandiose
o Most psychopaths have a heightened sense of self-worth (NOT low self-esteem like
expected)
Lying
o MMPI-2
o Structured Interview of Reported Symptoms
Manipulation
o A goal conflict
o The intent to deceive
o The deceptive act is successfully carried out
o Feeling of contemptuous delight
Lack of remorse
o What is it like for you to experience________ (feeling)?
o Write down what they say and include it in the report – they’ll either evade or give an
absurd or vague answer
Hyperactivity, Impulsivity, Attentional disorder + Conduct Problems = high risk subgroup for
psychopathy in children
Formal thought disorder common
Good at tactics, bad at strategy
Impulsivity
o Motor impulsivity, emotional impulsivity, cognitive impulsivity
Juvenile delinquency – 13 to 17
Higher rate of recidisivism
Sexual Violence
Young
Have criminal friends
Endorse attitudes tolerant of crime
Lead an unstable lifestyle
Have a history of criminal behavior
Sex offenders who complete treatment are less likely to recidivate than those who do not start
treatment
Assessment Tools
SPJ Assessment
SVR-20
Risk for Sexual Violence Protocol
Conceptual Actuarial
Stable-2000
Violence Prediction Scheme-Sexual Offender Version
Structured Risk Assessment (Thornton, 2002)
variables that increase a woman's risk of being victimized or that promote sexual violence by men. Similar
summaries could be constructed for social and cultural variables linked to sexual violence. You should
also be familiar with and be able to identify statistical trends in sexual violence, particularly those related
to North America
Risk factors
Transition
Short Term Assessment of Risk and Treatability (START; Webster et. al., 2004)
anger management and substance abuse interventions are particularly useful. The former should
specifically include instruction on how to remove oneself from destabilizing situations