Jumper (suicide)

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File:Jumper (suicide) in Dallas.jpg
A police officer attempts to persuade a young woman not to jump off a building.

A jumper, in police and media parlance, is a person who plans to fall or jump (or already has fallen or jumped) from a potentially deadly height, sometimes with the intention to commit suicide, at other times to escape conditions inside (e.g., a burning building).[1][2]

The term includes successfully-fatal suicides as well as those people who survive the attempt. The latter are often left with major injuries and permanent disabilities from the impact-related injuries.[3] A frequent scenario is that the jumper will sit on an elevated highway or building-ledge as police attempt to talk them down. Potential jumpers are sometimes encouraged by observers to jump, an effect known as "suicide baiting".[4]

The term was brought to prominence even more so in the immediate aftermath of the September 11 attacks, in which approximately 200 people at the point of impact or trapped above the point of impact in the North and South towers of the World Trade Center jumped to escape the fire and the smoke caused by the direct impact of Flights 11 and 175. Many of these jumpers were inadvertently captured on both television and amateur footage, even though television networks reporting on the tragedy attempted to avoid showing the jumpers falling to avoid upsetting viewers.

Songs which incorporate jumping as their main theme include:

As of 2002, the highest documented suicide jump was by expert skydiver Charles "Nish" Bruce, who killed himself[5] by leaping without a parachute from an airplane, at an altitude of over 5,000 feet (1,500 m).[6]

See also

  • Samaritans (charity)
  • Autodefenestration, purposefully jumping out of a window
  • The Bridge (2006), a documentary film about jumpers on the Golden Gate Bridge
  • The Falling Man (September 11, 2001), an iconic photograph of one of the hundreds of casualties of the September 11 attack victims who fell or jumped from the burning World Trade Center
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  • List of suicide sites
  • Lover's Leap, nickname for many scenic heights with the risk of a fatal fall and the possibility of a deliberate jump
  • Suicide barrier, access-control fence erected at certain high places to deter jumpers
  • Suicide bridge, particular bridges favored by jumpers

References

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