Hate crimes are crimes involving a person targeted because of their disability, belief/religion, transgender identity, sexual orientation, or race/ethnicity. Hate crimes can also be committed against property. A good example of this is a burning cross on a front lawn. The reality is hate crimes can be committed against anyone and although hate incidents are not crimes, they can easily escalate into crimes. By working with law enforcement and collecting evidence, a hate incident may be prevented from turning into a hate crime.
Hate crime is not as common as it used to be in the United States. Hate crimes were most common during the Civil Rights era when racism was common in the United States. Hate crimes were also commonplace when before the gay rights movement took shape with several highly publicized incidents appearing on the news like the Matthew Shepherd murder and the murder of a trans man by the name of Brandon Teena. These murders are examples of the kind of hate that existed and still exists today in America and the level of violence people are capable of when they do not like something or feel threatened by it.
While hate crimes have not been as publicized as they were in past years, hate crimes are still happening with thousands of cases reported to the FBI annually. 2014 alone had 5,642 single-bias incidents reported. (FBI) Almost half of them (47%)...
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