Hate Crime
Response to Bias-Motivated Violence
In the last three decades or so, nearly all American states have adopted a minimum of one statute, regarding a regulation for "hate crime." Such laws have assumed numerous forms, which include (C219 Lesson 9: Social Control -- Law Enforcement and Legal Recourse ):
• Laws prescribing criminal punishment for violation of civil rights;
• Specific "malicious harassment" and "ethnic intimidation" laws; and • Provisions of greater penalties in related laws already enacted for commission of an extant offense for prejudicial or bias reasons.
Several state statutes forbid organizational vandalism, religious objects' disfigurement or sacrilege, disturbance of or interference with religious worship, wearing masks or hoods, cross burning, distribution of ads and publications aimed at harassing specific groups in society, and secret society establishment (C219 Lesson 9: Social Control -- Law Enforcement and Legal Recourse ).
Social Control of Hate Crimes
Law enforcers at local, state, and federal levels have declared plans for increasing efforts to enforce laws pertaining to hate crime. This, probably, is most prominently evident in the development of specialized bias crime teams across the U.S. As per a 1997 LEMAS (Law Enforcement Management Administrative Statistics) survey of sheriff and police department operations, about 4 out of 10 cities inhabited by more than 0.5...
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