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L9.Discussion: Homicide, Assault, and Family Violence
Read the scenario and answer the questions that follow:Bobby Yurkanin’s 84-year-old father had Alzheimer’s disease. For nearly nine years, Bobby lived with his father, meeting the elder Yurkanins’s needs 24 hours per day, seven days per week. In the years prior to his father’s diagnosis, Bobby had also cared for his mother through her struggle with terminal cancer. Friends describe Bobby as a dedicated caregiver who patiently helped his father through episodes of wandering, combativeness, sudden mood swings, and public disrobing.
Neighbors and friends reported occasionally hearing Bobby yell or curse at his father in frustration, but nobody had witnessed physical violence. Those familiar with the Yurkanin family history claim that Bobby, an only child, experienced a difficult and traumatic childhood. His father was an alcoholic who reportedly abused Bobby, his mother, and his grandmother. In addition, Bobby’s mother suffered frequent psychotic episodes related to a mental disorder. Bobby eventually left the tumultuous home, finished college, spent time in law school, and started a paralegal business. In the late 1990s Bobby returned home to care for his ailing mother. Following Mrs. Yurkanin’s death, Bobby and his father sold their New Jersey home and moved to a condominium in Ft. Lauderdale, Florida.
It was on a visit to a Florida beach that Bobby witnessed another episode of his father’s public disrobing. Although witness accounts vary, it appears that an exasperated Bobby dragged his father into waist deep water in an attempt to put his father’s shorts back on. The elder Yurkanin fought Bobby and during the struggle the 84-year-old man’s head went under water. Witnesses report that Bobby eventually pulled his father out of the water but are unsure whether or not Bobby (a skilled life guard) performed CPR once on the sand. However, many witnesses report that Bobby resisted any calls to 911 and refused an ambulance for his father.
The next day, Mr. Yurkanin was pronounced dead. An autopsy listed drowning as the cause of death. Several days later, Bobby was arrested on charges of first-degree murder.
Discuss this case in relation to elder abuse and neglect, parricide, eldercide, and the cycle of violence.
300 words
Subject | Drug Abuse | Pages | 3 | Style | APA |
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Answer
Case Study: Homicide, Assault, and Family Violence
Caring for sick loved ones is a daunting task, especially when they need round the clock care. The sacrifice is only made by people who truly cared for and loved the sick relative. Despite having a rough childhood, Bobby proved he loved his father by putting his life on hold to offer him round the clock care at his old age. His father's condition caused him to develop frequent mood swings and combativeness that reminded Bobby of the trauma he faced as a child.
Although unfortunate, the death of Bobby's father is a case of both eldercide and parricide. Bobby, a trained lifeguard, intentionally failed to offer his father the help that would have saved his life. His father's stubbornness as a result of his medical condition coupled with his rough childhood experiences which are directly attributable to his father overcome his desire to take care of him. He, therefore, failed to offer him any first aid and went further to deny him access to medical care through refusing the ambulance. Booby's action paints a last-minute picture of elderly neglect which led to the death of the father.
Despite caring for him, Bobby and his father had a violent relationship. Their relationship is a perfect cycle of violence. According to Eriksson and Mazerolle (2015), in the honeymoon stage, victims of violence, just like Bobby, forgive their abuser and hope they have changed. In the second stage, tension builds between the abuser and his victim. In this stage, Bobby got frustrated with his father's actions and constantly yelled at him. In the last stage, Bobby got fed up with his father's actions and resorted to neglecting his medical needs leading to his untimely demise.
In conclusion, even though Bobby started taking care of his father with a noble intention. His actions at the beach show a frustrated person in the last stages of the cycle of violence; who desires to fight back. He achieves this desire by denying his dying father access to medical care leading to his death. He is, therefore, directly responsible for the murder of his father.
References
Eriksson, L., & Mazerolle, P. (2015). A cycle of violence? Examining family-of-origin violence, attitudes, and intimate partner violence perpetration. Journal of interpersonal violence, 30(6), 945-964.
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