Explaining the Link Between Alcohol and Homicides: Insights from the Analysis of Legal Cases in Lithuania
Laura Miščikienė, Justina Trišauskė, Mindaugas Štelemėkas, Kristina Astromskė

TL;DR
This study examines alcohol-related homicides in Lithuania, showing most occurred during binge drinking and highlights the need for stronger alcohol control policies.
Contribution
The study provides new insights into the role of binge drinking in homicides and the judicial treatment of alcohol-related violence in Lithuania.
Findings
84.6% of alcohol-related homicides occurred during binge drinking events.
Alcohol intoxication was common among both perpetrators (92.3%) and victims (86.5%).
Lithuanian courts treat alcohol consumption as an aggravating factor in violent crimes.
Abstract
Background and Objectives: Alcohol consumption has been a longstanding public health concern and known link to violence. The aims of this study were to analyze alcohol-related homicide cases in Lithuania, focusing on the prevalence of binge drinking among perpetrators and victims, the situational and behavioral patterns leading to violence, and the legal outcomes of these cases. Materials and Methods: This study employed a retrospective analysis of court case law of criminal cases of the year 2019. The analysis was conducted by combining qualitative and quantitative analytical approaches. Results: The findings revealed that 84.6% of homicides occurred during binge drinking events. Alcohol intoxication was prevalent among both perpetrators (92.3%) and victims (86.5%), emphasizing the dual role of alcohol in homicide cases. Interpersonal violence was the primary pattern of homicide…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCrime Patterns and Interventions · Suicide and Self-Harm Studies · HIV, Drug Use, Sexual Risk
