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Consultation outcome: Domestic homicide review legislation consultation

Home Office

February 5
10:17 2024

Detail of outcome

The government response to this consultation includes:

  • a summary and analysis of the responses received
  • next steps, including legislative changes

Original consultation

Summary

We are consulting on amending domestic homicide review legislation (Domestic Violence, Crime and Victims Act 2004).

This consultation ran from
to

Consultation description

We are seeking views on amending the domestic homicide review (DHR) legislation in the Domestic Violence, Crime and Victims Act 2004 (DVCVA) to ensure a DHR is commissioned when the death has, or appears to have, resulted from domestic abuse as defined by the Domestic Abuse Act 2021.

Currently, the DVCVA 2004 specifies that a DHR should be considered in instances where the death of a person aged 16 or over has, or appears to have, resulted from violence, abuse or neglect by either:

  • a person to whom he was related or with whom he was or had been in an intimate personal relationship

  • a member of the same household as him

The Domestic Abuse Act 2021 introduced a statutory definition of domestic abuse that incorporates a range of abuses beyond violence, abuse and neglect to include controlling or coercive behaviour, emotional and economic abuse. Explicitly including the term domestic abuse (DA) would ensure that DHRs continue to contribute to our understanding of DA, and capture learnings to prevent fatal DA.

We are also seeking views on amending the term homicide in DHRs to reflect the range of the deaths which fall within scope of a DHR. The statutory guidance was updated in 2016 to clarify that DHRs could be conducted for suicides by victims where the circumstances give rise to concern, for example it emerges that there was controlling or coercive behaviour in the relationship. This was in recognition of the number of victims who die by suicide linked to DA. The term homicide in a DHR can be confusing and problematic for families after their loved one has died by suicide linked to DA. The term homicide is also not applicable when conducting a review into deaths ruled as unexplained or unexpected by a coroner.

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