BURGEONING BIAS. California attorney general Rob Bonta, right,
discusses the rise in hate crimes in California at a news conference in
Sacramento, California, on June 28, 2022. Bonta said hate crimes in 2021
shot up 33% to nearly 1,800 reported incidents. It is the sixth highest
tally on record and the highest since after the 9/11 terrorist attack in
2001. "Our elders were being physically attacked, women and young people
were being verbally insulted, AAPI students were being harassed and
bullied at school, and AAPI-owned small businesses were targeted and
discriminated against just because they were AAPI," says Cirian
Villavicencio, a commissioner with the California Commission on Asian
and Pacific Islander American Affairs. (AP Photo/Rich Pedroncelli)
From The Asian Reporter, V32, #7 (July 4, 2022), pages 11 &
16.
Anti-Black, gay, Asian bias fuel California hate
crime surge
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Hate crimes driven by homophobia and racism
resulted in a 33% surge in reported incidents in California last year,
following a similar spike in hate-driven attacks the year prior and
confirming what officials have been hearing anecdotally since the
pandemic began, the state’s attorney general said.
Attorney General Rob Bonta said crimes against Black people were
again the most prevalent in 2021, climbing 13% from 2020 to 513 reported
incidents. Hate crimes motivated by sexual orientation bias increased
nearly 50% to 303 incidents, while crimes against Asian Americans were
up 178% to 247 incidents.
"One hard truth in our state, just as we see across the nation, is
that the epidemic of hate we saw spurred on during the pandemic remains
a clear and present threat," said Bonta, at a news conference. "Each of
these incidents represents an attack on a person, a neighbor, a family
member, a fellow Californian."
The 1,763 hate crimes reported in 2021 was the sixth highest tally
since the department began collecting and reporting data statewide in
1995. It is also the highest since 2001, when 2,261 hate crimes fuelled
by the 9/11 terrorist attacks were reported in California.
Last year’s annual report showed a similarly high increase — 31% —
with anti-Black bias making up the bulk of incidents in a state where
African Americans are 6% of the population. The 2020 report also showed
a startling increase in bias crimes against Asian Americans following
the emergence of the coronavirus in China.
Video of assaults on Asian Americans, particularly seniors, went
viral last year with San Francisco police in January reporting an
astonishing 567% increase in reported crimes from the previous year. The
initial count showed 60 victims in 2021, up from nine in 2020. Half of
last year’s victims were allegedly targeted by one man.
Still, not all criminal attacks carry a hate crime charge since
prosecutors need to prove the suspect was motivated by bias. In San
Francisco, for example, the 2021 death of an 84-year-old Thai
grandfather is headed to trial although the district attorney’s office
has not filed hate crime charges in that case.
Officials say reported hate crime statistics may be far lower than
actual numbers, but add they’ve taken steps to encourage reporting by
victims. Nationally, hate crimes rose to the highest level in more than
a decade in 2019, according to an FBI report. Community leaders who
joined Bonta at the press conference urged people to report crimes and
to seek resources such as mental health services. Cirian Villavicencio,
commissioner with the California Commission on Asian and Pacific
Islander American Affairs, said hateful attacks against the Asian
American and Pacific Islander (AAPI) community are not new.
But the sheer rise in attacks during the pandemic was alarming, he
said.
"Our elders were being physically attacked, women and young people
were being verbally insulted, AAPI students were being harassed and
bullied at school, and AAPI-owned small businesses were targeted and
discriminated against just because they were AAPI," Villavicencio said.
In May, a white gunman killed 10 Black shoppers and workers at a
supermarket in Buffalo, New York. A steep rise in anti-Asian bias since
2020 included the March 2021 killing of eight people at Atlanta-area
massage businesses, including six women of Asian descent.
A hate crime is motivated by the victim’s gender, nationality, race
or ethnicity, religion, sexual orientation, or disability. Hate
incidents such as name calling are not necessarily criminal. The
California Department of Justice has collected and reported statewide
data on hate crimes since 1995.
Crimes showing bias against Latinos increased 30% to 197 incidents in
2021 while anti-Jewish bias events increased 32% to 152 in 2021, the
most in the religious bias category.
Bonta announced the new position of a statewide hate crime
coordinator within the California Department of Justice to assist state
and local law enforcement efforts to battle hate crimes.
The report also showed that district attorneys and elected city
attorneys filed 30% more cases in 2021 involving hate crime charges.
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