ORIGINAL ARTICLE Correlates of Intimate Partner Stalking Precipitated Homicides in the United States Abha Rai 1 & Tatiana Villarreal-Otálora 1 & Julianne Blackburn 1 & Y. Joon Choi 1 # Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature 2020 Abstract Intimate partner stalking is a significant health and safety concern in the United States, yet research on this phenomenon remains minimal. The purpose of this study is to examine the correlates of homicides precipitated by intimate partner stalking among a sample of homicide victims. This cross-sectional study included a subsample of adult homicide cases classified as intimate partner violence victims (N = 6028) between 2003 and 2015 on the National Violent Death Reporting System (NVDRS). The analysis explored victim- and suspect-related factors associations to homicide precipitated by intimate partner stalking. Bivariate associations were examined using Pearsons correlation and Fisher s exact test. Those meeting a significance threshold of .25 were included in the final analysis. Missingness was addressed with multiple imputation. The logistic regression analysis examined victim (marital status, education level, and geographic region of the homicide) and suspect (age, sex, firearm, and docu- mented history of abuse towards victim) variablesassociations to homicide precipitated by intimate partner stalking. The findings suggest that the victims marital status, suspects sex, suspects use of a firearm, geographic region of the homicide, and a documented history of abuse of victim by the suspect had significant relationships with homicide precipitated by intimate partner stalking. The associations between death by firearm and previously doc- umented history of abuse with homicide precipitated by intimate partner stalking have substantial implications for the criminal justice system. Limitations of the NVDRS dataset, recommendations for research, policy and prevention are discussed. Keywords Stalking precipitated homicides . Intimate partner violence . Correlates . NVDRS In 2016, more than 22% of homicides in the United States (US) were carried out by an intimate partner (Ertl et al. 2019). The Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) ( 2015) classifies such deaths as intimate partner ho- micide or incidents in which violence or the threat of vio- lence by a person against his or her current or former intimate partner results in the violent death of one or more people(p. 78). To understand this phenomenon, researchers have exam- ined multiple correlates and possible risk factors (Campbell et al. 2007; Ertl et al. 2019; Spencer and Stith 2018; Spitzberg and Cupach 2007). Apart from the vastly examined correlates, such as intimate partner violence (IPV) and access to lethal means (Spencer and Stith 2018), the literature has identified stalking as a risk factor of intimate partner homicides (Campbell et al. 2007; Spitzberg and Cupach 2007). Per the CDC, stalking is defined as harassing or threatening behaviors used by a perpetrator that cause safety concerns for the victim (Black et al. 2011). Intimate partner stalking is a specific subtype of stalking that occurs when such patterns of behavior are directed from a former spouse, boyfriend, girl- friend, partner, or cohabitant (Tjaden and Thoennes 2002). In addition to intimate partner stalking being a correlate of inti- mate partner homicide, the two phenomena have multiple pre- dictors in common, such as gender (Tjaden and Thoennes 1998), relationship status (Logan et al. 2007a, b; McFarlane et al. 1999), IPV (Brady and Hayes 2018; Nobles et al. 2018; Sheridan and Davies 2001), and job performance problems (Logan et al. 2007b; Logan and Walker 2009). Despite their connection, there is little research on homicides precipitated by * Abha Rai abha.rai@uga.edu 1 School of Social Work, University of Georgia, 279 Williams Street, Athens, GA 30602, USA Journal of Family Violence https://doi.org/10.1007/s10896-020-00137-5