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http://www.suntimes.com/news/nation...-hate20.article Hate crimes rise 8 percent U.S. | Sharpton says numbers prove his point November 20, 2007 BY MICHAEL J. SNIFFEN WASHINGTON -- Hate crime incidents rose nearly 8 percent last year, the FBI reported Monday, as civil rights advocates increasingly take to the streets to protest what they call official indifference. Police across the nation reported 7,722 criminal incidents in 2006 targeting victims or property as a result of bias against a race, religion, sexual orientation, ethnic or national origin or physical or mental disability. More than half the incidents were motivated by racial prejudice. Illinois reported 156 incidents. Although the noose incidents and beatings among students at a Jena, La., high school occurred in 2006, they were not included in the report. Only 12,600 of the nation's more than 17,000 local, county, state and federal police agencies participated in the hate crime reporting program in 2006 and neither Jena nor LaSalle Parish, in which the town is located, were among those reporting. Nevertheless, the Jena incidents, and a subsequent rash of noose and racial incidents around the country, have spawned civil rights demonstrations that culminated last week at Justice Department headquarters here. The department said it investigated the Jena incident but decided not to prosecute because the federal government does not typically bring hate crime charges against juveniles. ''The FBI report confirms what we have been saying for many months about the severe increase in hate crimes,'' said the Rev. Al Sharpton, who organized Friday's march. http://www.mercurynews.com/politics...?nclick_check=1 Hate crimes increase in U.S., fall in state BUT MANY POLICE AGENCIES DON'T REPORT INCIDENTS By Tina Marie Maciasand Richard Winton Los Angeles Times Article Launched: 11/20/2007 01:36:48 AM PST LOS ANGELES - California bucked a national trend last year by reporting a slight drop in the occurrence of hate crimes, while law enforcement agencies throughout the nation reported a corresponding 8 percent increase, according to data released Monday. According to an FBI national tally, there were 7,722 reported incidents of crime motivated by race, religion, sexual orientation, ethnicity, national origin, or physical or mental disability in 2006. That figure represents a 7.8 percent increase from the 7,163 cases reported in 2005. Conversely, police in California reported a 6 percent decline: The state as a whole saw its hate crime figures fall from 1,379 to 1,297. However, there was one similarity between California and national figures: At least half of all hate crime cases reported in 2006 were motivated by race. Statisticians and those who track hate crimes said it was difficult to draw any hard conclusions from the government's data, because law enforcement agencies are not required to submit hate-crimes information to the FBI. Of the more than 17,000 police agencies across the country, 12,600 provided data on incidents. "The number of hate crime incidents increasing may be due to a significant increase in the number of police agencies reporting numbers," said Robin Toma, executive director of Los Angeles County Human Relations Commission, which tracks hate crimes in the county. Nationwide, Toma said, many agencies don't participate in the gathering of hate crime data. Most notable, he said, was the jurisdiction encompassing Jena, La., where incidents of hanging nooses - symbols reminiscent of lynchings - and the beating of white students by black youth in retaliation garnered heavy publicity. Despite these events, authorities there do not participate in the annual hate crime count. In California however, "hate crime reporting is a part of the fabric of law enforcement work," Toma said. According to the FBI's national figures, race was the motivating factor for 4,000 hate crimes last year, with 2,640 incidents specifically targeting blacks. The total number of incidents is the highest since 2001, when 9,730 hate crimes were reported. That spike was believed related to anti-Arab or anti-Muslim incidents stemming from the Sept. 11 attacks, according to the FBI's report for that year. The study found that 51.8 percent of all hate crimes in 2006 were motivated by race, 18.9 percent by religion, 15.5 percent by sexual orientation and 12.7 percent by ethnicity or national origin. "The FBI report confirms what we have been saying for many months about the severe increase in hate crimes," said the Rev. Al Sharpton. "What is not reported, however, is the lack of prosecution and serious investigation by the Justice Department to counter this increase in hate crimes." Sharpton called for Attorney General Michael Mukasey to meet with members of the Congressional Black Caucus and civil rights leaders to discuss hate crime enforcement. Justice Department spokesman Brian Roehrkasse said federal prosecutors convicted a record 189 defendants of civil rights violations in the fiscal year that ended Sept. 30. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |