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Hate Crimes Rise in Major US Cities in 2017

by Masood Farivar

   Hate crimes have jumped by nearly 20 percent in major U.S. cities
   through much of this year, after increasing nationally by 5 percent
   last year, according to police data compiled by the Center for the
   Study of Hate and Extremism at California State University at San
   Bernardino.

   The number of hate crimes in 13 cities with a population of over
   250,000 rose to 827 incidents, up 19.9 percent from 690 reported during
   the same period last year, according to the study. Only two cities -
   Columbus, Ohio, and Riverside, California - posted declines.
   Among the nation's six largest cities, including New York City, Los
   Angeles and Chicago, the number of hate incidents increased to 526 from
   431 last year, up 22.4 percent, according to the study.
   In New York City, hate crimes jumped 28.4 percent; in Los Angeles by 13
   percent; in Philadelphia by 9 percent; in Chicago, by 8.3 percent, and
   in Phoenix, Arizona, by a whopping 46 percent. Houston, the nation's
   No. 4 city, bucked the trend, reporting five incidents through July 31,
   the same number as last year.
   Major hate crimes reported this year included the stabbing of an
   African-American man in New York City in March; the fatal stabbing of
   two men protecting a hijab-wearing Muslim woman in Portland, Oregon in
   May; and the killing of a protester in Charlottesville, Virginia last
   month.
   All were committed by "avowed white supremacists," said Brian Levin,
   director of the hate and extremism studies center in California.
   If 2017 ends with an overall increase, it would mark the third
   consecutive annual rise in hate crimes, something not seen since 2004,
   according to Levin said.

   What is a Hate Crime?

   A hate crime is often defined as a violent crime motivated by hate
   based on race, color or national origin, among other factors.
   Most hate crimes go unreported. According to a recent report by the
   federal government's Bureau of Justice Statistics, more than half of
   the 250,000 hate crimes that took place each year between 2004 and 2015
   were not reported to the police.

   The FBI's annual hate crime report for 2016 is due in November. In
   2015, the FBI recorded 5,850 hate crimes, up 7 percent from 5,479
   incidents in 2014. Hate crimes targeting Muslims jumped 67 percent in
   2015, the FBI said.

   In addition to Muslims, the recent spate of hate-spurred violence has
   targeted Jews, African-Americans and members of the LGBTQ community,
   Levin said.

   Recent Offenses

   The California State University study comes just weeks after violent
   protests in Charlottesville shone a spotlight on violent racism. One
   person was killed and many others injured after a man with known
   white-supremacist views drove his car into a crowd of protesters.
   President Donald Trump was widely criticized for equivocating in his
   condemnation of the incident, placing the blame on the "many sides"
   present in Charlottesville, rather than specifically criticizing the
   white-supremacist groups who gathered for the rally and marched through
   the town at night carrying flaming torches and calling out slogans
   reminiscent of fascist displays in Nazi Germany.
   Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, speaking at the Birmingham
   Civil Rights Institute this week, condemned the incident in
   Charlottesville, where "we saw and heard people openly advocate racism
   and bigotry, and commit terrible acts of violence."
   The Department of Justice is investigating the incident as an "act of
   domestic terrorism." DOJ "makes it a priority to investigate and
   prosecute federal hate crimes, particularly in places where local
   authorities fail to carry out their responsibility to protect civil
   rights," Rosenstein said.

   Trends
   Hate-crime rises in large cities tend to far outpace increases
   nationally. Even if the current trend continues for the rest of the
   year, the overall increase in U.S. hate crimes is likely to remain in
   the single digits.
   The Center for the Study of Hate and Extremism estimates that the
   number of hate crimes reported to police throughout the United States
   last year increased by about 5 percent, topping 6,000 incidents for the
   first time since 2012.

   Levin, the center's director, said that hate crimes have increased
   during every presidential election since 1992.
   Last year, he said, there were "profound spikes" in hate crimes around
   the Nov. 8 elections. In New York City, for example, 34 percent of all
   hate crimes reported during 2016 occurred after the vote.