Melissa Bemiller, PhD

Associate Professor of Social Sciences Augusta University

  • Augusta GA

Dr. Bemiller's research focuses on violent victimization: homicide, sex crimes, and portrayals of violence in mass media.

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Augusta University

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Biography

Dr. Bemiller's research focuses on violent victimization: homicide, sex crimes, and portrayals of violence in mass media. Her expertise lies in the research and prevention of child abuse and homicide.

Areas of Expertise

Sex Crimes
Child Abuse
Homicide
Violent Victimization
Portrayals of Violence in Mass Media
Murdering of Children

Education

University of Central Florida

PhD

Sociology

2013

University of Central Florida

Master of Art

Sociology

2010

University of Central Florida

Bachelor of Science

Criminal Justice/Law Enforcement Administration

2008

Articles

Fatal Factors for Preschoolers Victims, Offenders, and Context

Homicide Studies

Janice E. Clifford, Melissa J. Tetzlaff-Bemiller*, John P. Jarvis, ...

2016

This research examines how victim and offender characteristics, as well as contextual factors are related to the lethality of assaults for children less than 5 years old...,

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Undercover Online: An Extension of Traditional Policing in the United States

International Journal of Cyber Criminology

Melissa J. Tetzlaff-Bemiller

2011

This study examines law enforcement personnel who work undercover chatting investigations in order to catch online sexual predators...

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MAOA, Drug Selling, and Violent Victimization

Criminal Justice Review

Stephen J. Watts, Melissa J. Tetzlaff-Bemiller, James C. McCutcheon

2017-02-17

Involvement in drug markets is a significant risk factor for criminal victimization. Separately, the monoamine oxidase A (MAOA) gene has been identified as correlating with risky and antisocial behaviors and moderating the effects of environmental risk factors on antisocial behaviors. Using a sample drawn from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health (N = 8,860), we explore whether MAOA genotype moderates the effect of drug selling on violent victimization. Results show that drug selling increases violent victimization among males, but not females. Additionally, the effect of drug selling on violent victimization among males is greater among the carriers of the 2R/3R alleles of MAOA, providing evidence of Gene × Environment interaction. These results appear despite a number of controls that potentially make the drug selling–violent victimization relationship spurious. Implications of the findings are discussed.

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