Introduction
Victimology is the study of the role of the victims in criminal offences and the psychological effects these offences have on the victim and their experiences; it has been further stated to be the state of mind which originates from the very real or very imagined state of victimization that can either glorify or indulge the state of being a victim.
David Rathband was a unique case example of how victimisation can have detrimental affects for the life of the victim after the initial interaction between the criminal and the victim. While not unheard of in other police cases of interaction with criminals, Rathband was blinded, and in the twenty months that followed between the incident and his death, slowly spiralled from recovery to demise.
In this essay, relevant
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Rathband was continuously exposed to and in direct line of coming into contact with offenders and always held the possibility of being victimised; very little can be said in the precipitation of Rathband’s initial incident with Moat which blinded him, his suicide attempt, while being solely precipitated by himself, also was a slow degradation from coping to his demise. By turning down the options for private therapy and help from the Northumberland Police, Rathband obviously failed to recover from his initial incident with was further exacerbated by the dissolution of his marriage, thus taking away the higher chance for him to live as close to a normal life as a victim of an offense. Tragic as Rathband’s story may be, he still failed to do his part to try and recover from his victimisation as well as created further reasoning for him to not be able to cope such as having the numerous affairs, making suicide threats to his latest mistress and making threatening phone calls