Dictionary Definition
arsonist n : a criminal who illegally sets fire
to property [syn: incendiary, firebug]
User Contributed Dictionary
Translations
one who has committed the act of arson, or
illegally setting fire to property
- Czech: žhář
- Dutch: brandstichter
- German: Brandstifter
- Italian: piromane, incendiario
- Japanese: 放火犯, 放火魔
- Portuguese: incendiário
- Spanish: pirómano
Extensive Definition
Arson, in general, is the crime of maliciously, voluntarily,
and willfully setting fire
to the building, buildings, or other property of another, or of
burning one's own property for an improper purpose, as to collect
insurance.
Common law definition
At common law, the elements of arson are:- The malicious Burning Of the dwelling Of another.
The prosecutor must prove each
element beyond a reasonable doubt.
Eighteenth-century common law
punished arson as a felony. However, it did not
regard the destruction of an unoccupied building as arson, "[s]ince
arson protected habitation, the burning of an unoccupied house did
not constitute arson" and further, "[t]he burning of one's own
dwelling to collect insurance did not constitute common law arson.
It was generally assumed in early England that one had the legal
right to destroy his own property in any manner he chose."
United States Law
In the U.S., the common law elements serve as a basic template, but individual jurisdictions occasionally alter them and they vary from state to state. For example, most states no longer require the "dwelling" element. In these states, the crime of arson includes the burning of any personal property without consent or with unlawful intent.Arson charges are prosecuted with attention to
degree of severity in the alleged offense: First-degree felony
arson is usually charged when persons are harmed or killed in the
course of the fire, second-degree felony arson when significant
destruction of property occurs, and so forth. Arson is also
variously prosecuted as a misdemeanor or "criminal mischief" or "destruction of property." If the arson
involved a "breaking and entering", the second charge of burglary is usually attached.
It is possible for the death
penalty to be applied in cases where arson is deemed to be a
method of homicide, as was the recent case in Texas of Cameron
Willingham.
English and Scots Law
In English law, arson was a common law offence most recently redefined and codified by the Criminal Damage Act 1971. In Scots Law, the term "fire-raising" has always been used rather than 'arson' though the meaning of the offence is the same.Motives
The possibility of financial gain often drives
arsonists to file fraudulent insurance
claims after setting a fire. Indeed, the most common motive for
arson is profit. The ongoing subprime
mortgage crisis may lead to an increase in home arsons.
Some arson is committed in an effort to conceal
or disguise other crimes. Some may be committed by 'enforcers' of
protection rackets as consequences of failing to pay extortionists.
Revenge drives some arsonists. Victims’ property
is often damaged or destroyed, compromising physical safety and
sometimes causing personal
injury. Domestic
violence sometimes results in arson. Firefighters are
occasionally found to have committed arson, with motives including
revenge, or pyromania.
Anger and frustration are behind the arsons
perpetrated by juvenile
vandals. Vandalism through fire often occurs in vacant or abandoned
buildings - for instance schools. Cities usually encourage owners
to secure vacant buildings. Fire
departments aggressively attack fires in abandoned buildings
out of concern for the transient or homeless people that may be
dwelling inside.
Political
ideology motivates some acts of arson. For example, some
members of the Earth
Liberation Front are believed to have set fires to structures
in order to spread a message of environmental protection. And in
virtually every human conflict/war throughout history, acts of
arson have been committed or attributed to each side of the
conflict, such as in the American
Civil War, Kristallnacht
- crystal night - pogroms
in Nazi Germany in 1938 when ~1000 Jewish synagoges were burnt or most
recently, Serbian protests of
Kosovo's
Independence, at the Serbia-Kosovo border on February
19,2008
and at the American
Embassy in Belgrade on
February
21,2008.
It was rumored that Roman emperor Nero purposefully
ordered the Great
Fire of Rome, which erupted on the night of July 18, 64 CE. In
reality, the fire started from the shops selling flammable goods at
the southeastern end of the Circus
Maximus and reportedly lasted for nine days.
Political power motivates others, such as the
notorious Reichstag
fire of 1934, when the main parliament building in Germany was burnt
to the ground. A young Dutchman, Marius van der Lubbe was found in
the building after the fire had started, and he confessed to the
deed. However, recent research in the Gestapo archives
has shown that the Nazis were actually
responsible and used the boy as a scapegoat. A part of SA
storm-troopers entered the building along a tunnel from Goering's
Presidential palace and set fire to the central chamber using
self-igniting mixtures. It is clear from the original fire
investigation that no single person could have started so many
small fires in the short time available.
See also
References
- White, J. & Dalby, J. T., 2000. Arson. In D. Mercer, T. Mason, M. McKeown, G. McCann (Eds) Forensic Mental Health Care. Edinburgh: Churchill Livingston. ISBN 0-443-06140-8
Notes
arsonist in German: Brandstiftung
arsonist in Spanish: Delito de incendio
arsonist in Korean: 방화
arsonist in Dutch: Brandstichting
arsonist in Japanese: 放火及び失火の罪
arsonist in Norwegian: Brannstiftelse
arsonist in Polish: Podpalenie
arsonist in Russian: Поджог
arsonist in Simple English: Arson
arsonist in Slovenian: Požig
arsonist in Finnish: Tuhopoltto
arsonist in Swedish: Mordbrand
arsonist in Chinese: 縱火
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
annihilator, biblioclast, bomber, burner, demolisher, destroyer, dynamitard, dynamiter, exterminator, fire
worshiper, firebug,
hun, iconoclast, idol breaker,
idoloclast, incendiary, nihilist, pyrolater, pyromaniac, pyrophile, ruiner, syndicalist, terrorist, torch, vandal, wrecker