Los Angeles Times - 13.11.2019

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A6 WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2019 WSCE LATIMES.COM


THE NATION


Hate crimes targeting
people in 2018 surged to their
highest levels in 16 years de-
spite a slight overall dip in
the number of hate crimes,
the FBI said in a report re-
leased Tuesday.
The FBI’s tally, which
used data submitted by
more than 2,000 police de-
partments and law enforce-
ment agencies, logged 7,
hate crimes. The total is 55
lower than 2017, a decline of
less than 1%.
The drop is the first time
hate crimes have gone down
in four years. But it’s tiny
when compared with long-
term trends in increased
hate crimes. Aside from last
year, the total number of
hate crimes the FBI re-
ported is higher than every
year since 2008.
“The numbers, on the
surface, seem to remain rela-
tively flat overall,” said Brian
Levin, director of the Center
for the Study of Hate and Ex-
tremism at Cal State San
Bernardino. “But under-
neath the data there are
some interesting trends
happening.
“There has been a dis-
turbing shift to hate crimes
directed against people as
opposed to property, and
these increases are seen al-
most across the board,” he
said.
According to the FBI,
crimes against people grew
to 4,571 last year, a year-to-
year increase of just under
12%.
“The number of crimes
targeting Muslims crater-
ed,” Levin said. “Anti-Semit-
ic crimes dropped. But the
ones targeting Latinos in-


creased for the third year.”
The FBI counted 188 anti-
Muslim hate crimes, down
from 273 the year before.
There were 835 anti-Semitic
incidents, compared with
938 the previous year. And
there were 485 anti-Latino
crimes, up from 427 in 2017.
The total number of crimes
targeting Latinos increased
41% since 2016.
The number of crimes
singling out transgender
and gender nonconforming
people also shot up 41%, to
16 8.
In California, there was a
nearly 4% decline in hate
crimes to 1,063. But Los An-
geles experienced a more
than 7% increase in hate
crimes for a total of 282. The
most common ones targeted
a person’s race.
Last year included the
deadliest attack on Jews in
modern U.S. history, when a
gunman killed 11 worshipers
at the Tree of Life synagogue

in Pittsburgh on Oct. 27, 2018.
Before the shootings, the
suspect posted online about
immigrant “invaders” aided
by Jewish-run refugee reset-
tlement groups and called
Jews the “enemy of white
people.” He awaits trial in
federal court.
Because of the deaths in
Pittsburgh, the 24 hate
crime killings the FBI re-
ported was the highest fig-
ure since the bureau first re-
leased annual data on hate
crimes 27 years ago.
The FBI’s report follows
its 2017 hate crimes count,
which showed the largest in-
crease since 2001. That year,
anti-Muslim crimes in-
creased after the Sept. 11 at-
tacks.
Tuesday’s report is the
second annual release of
hate crimes statistics during
Donald Trump’s presidency.
As he campaigns for reelec-
tion, Trump has defended
himself against accusations

that his presidency has em-
boldened hate groups.
Jewish organizations, in-
cluding the Anti-Defama-
tion League, have blamed
Trump’s rhetoric about im-
migrants and his embrace
of anti-Jewish conspiracy
theories and memes as part
of what led to increases in
2017 in anti-Semitic inci-
dents and those targeting
Latinos and Muslims.
Trump has tweeted anti-
Jewish and anti-Muslim
memes from known extrem-
ists, including a campaign
tweet that featured a symbol
similar to the Star of David,
images of cash and the
phrase “most corrupt candi-
date ever” to describe Hilla-
ry Clinton.
In late 2017, Trump
tweeted anti-Muslim videos
from the far-right group
Britain First, drawing con-
demnation from then-Prime
Minister Theresa May.
This year, the president

faced critics after he tweeted
to four congresswomen of
color — three of whom were
born in the U.S. — to “go
back” to the “totally broken
and crime infested places
from which they came.”
In his defense, the presi-
dent has said he is the “least
racist person there is any-
where in the world.” He has
pointed to his own family,
which includes a Jewish
daughter, son-in-law and
grandchildren, to fend off ac-
cusations of anti-Semitism.
Criminologists and civil
rights groups concede that
hate crimes began to in-
crease in 2015 under Presi-
dent Obama after six years
of decline. Studies have also
shown that hate crimes tend
to grow during election years
and times of tense political
fights over issues such as im-
migration or national secu-
rity, Levin said.
“You can’t prove that ev-
ery move Trump makes
leads to a hate crime,” he
said. “But you can look at the
year 2016 and see a spike in
hate crimes, or look at the in-
crease in anti-immigrant
rhetoric ... in recent years
and see an increase in anti-
Latino crimes.”
Daniel Elbaum, chief ad-
vocacy officer of the Ameri-
can Jewish Committee,
partly pointed to “the ugli-
ness” of social and policy de-
bates in the U.S. to explain
the high number of hate
crimes.
“There is nothing new
about hate in America, but
the combination of the ugli-
ness in our public discourse
and the ease with which this
incendiary language can be
spread has clearly had disas-
trous, sometimes fatal, con-
sequences,” Elbaum said.
“That is what we saw with
the murders at the Tree of
Life synagogue in Pitts-
burgh and the Chabad of
Poway.”
The Poway synagogue
shooting in April of this year

left one person dead and
three others injured.
Experts said the FBI’s
count probably misses many
— possibly most — hate
crimes that took place last
year.
There are more than
16,000 law enforcement
agencies in the country, and
they report hate crime num-
bers to the FBI voluntarily.
In the count released Tues-
day, more than 14,000 agen-
cies did not report data or
told the bureau there were
no hate crimes in their juris-
dictions.
That included all of Ala-
bama and Wyoming, where
agencies reported zero hate
crimes. There were also no
hate crimes reported in St.
Petersburg, Fla.; Madison,
Wis.; and Newark, N.J. There
were 85 cities with popula-
tions higher than 100,
where law enforcement ei-
ther did not share data with
the FBI or said there were
zero hate crimes.
It’s also harder to analyze
the FBI’s data over time be-
cause of changes to how the
bureau has collected infor-
mation.
The FBI defines a hate
crime as a “criminal offense
against a person or property
motivated in whole or in part
by an offender’s bias against
a race, religion, disability,
sexual orientation, ethnic-
ity, gender or gender iden-
tity.” Crimes against Hin-
dus, Sikhs and Arabs have
been counted only since 2015.
Another problem is that vic-
tims don’t always call the po-
lice.
In addition, the FBI’s
data conflict with the Jus-
tice Department’s National
Crime Victimization Survey,
which estimates there to be
250,000 hate crimes each
year. The Justice Depart-
ment count doesn’t include
intimidation and vandalism
incidents, which are in-
cluded in the FBI’s hate
crimes report.

Hate crimes against Latinos rise, FBI says


LASTyear included the deadliest attack on Jews in modern U.S. history, when a
gunman killed 11 worshipers at the Tree of Life synagogue in Pittsburgh on Oct. 27.

Gene J. PuskarAssociated Press

Individuals, rather


than property, are


targeted more, as are


transgender people.


By Jaweed Kaleem


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