Media framing helps to shape our understanding of the meaning of news events, often
problematically. This study examines how this process interacts with the phenomenon of
familicide-suicide, where a person kills one or more family members before taking their
own life. A social constructionist analysis of the print media coverage of three high-profile
cases in Ireland highlights framing and discursive patterns, contributing to an explanatory
framework that is misleading and lacking in an evidence base. As well as a tendency
towards broad and poorly supported claims-making, several primary causal frames are
prevalent: mental health; financial debt; fall from grace; and ‘out of the blue’, whilst a
domestic violence frame is notable in its absence. Coverage is found to be episodic in
character, linked to dramatisation and more simplistic explanatory frames, rather than
evidence-based analysis of potential causal factors for these incidents. Findings raise
important questions for journalistic practice, regarding processes of selection and salience of sources contributing to overall coverage that is partial and biased, rather than an
‘objective’ representation of the social world