ADL calls for legal action against hate crimes

NEW YORK (Press Release) — The Anti-Defamation League (ADL) on Tuesday called on lawmakers and law enforcement authorities to take action to address the deeply disturbing climate of hate in the United States after newly released FBI data showed that Jews and Jewish institutions were the overwhelming target of religion-based hate crimes last year – as they have been every year since 1991.

In its annual Hate Crime Statistics Act (HCSA) report, the FBI found that total hate crimes decreased slightly in 2018 after three consecutive years of increases. The agency reported 7,120 total hate crimes in 2018, compared to 7,175 in 2017. While religion-based hate crimes decreased by eight percent from 2017, nearly 60 percent of hate crime attacks were targeted against Jews and Jewish institutions in 2018.

“It is unacceptable that Jews and Jewish institutions continue to be at the center of religion-based hate crime attacks,” said ADL CEO Jonathan Greenblatt. “We need to take concrete action to address and combat this significant problem. We strongly urge Congress to immediately pass the Khalid Jabara and Heather Heyer National Opposition to Hate, Assault, and Threats to Equality (NO HATE) Act. By improving hate crime training, prevention, best practices, and data collection, we can stem hate crimes nationwide.”

For 2018, the FBI reported:

  • Hate crime murders totaled 24, the highest since the FBI began tracking and reporting on hate crimes in 1991. The increase is attributable to 2018 having seen the deadliest anti-Semitic hate crime in American history, when 11 worshippers were murdered in the three congregations meeting at the Tree of Life Synagogue building in Pittsburgh.
  • Race-based hate crimes were once again the most common type of hate crime, as in every previous year. Nearly 50 percent of race-based hate crimes were directed against African-Americans.
  • Hate crimes directed at LGBTQ individuals increased by almost six percent, including a significant 42 percent increase in crimes directed against transgender individuals, up from 119 in 2017 to 168 in 2018.
  • Anti-Hispanic hate crimes increased 14 percent, the third straight year of increased reporting, which is especially disturbing at a time ADL and others have documented escalating anti-immigrant rhetoric and bigotry.

Despite the decline in total hate crimes from 2017 to 2018, a serious reporting gap remains. The FBI data is based on voluntary local law enforcement reporting to the Bureau. One-hundred and ten fewer law enforcement agencies participated in the HCSA program in 2018, failing to report any data, following record-high participation in 2017. In addition, at least 85 cities with populations exceeding 100,000 residents either did not report any data to the FBI or affirmatively reported zero hate crimes. Alabama and Wyoming reported zero hate crimes for 2018.

“Our nation cannot address crimes that we are not measuring. ADL is working with our coalition and other civil rights, education, and interfaith partners to make sure cities report credible data. This starts with training our nation’s law enforcement officers to identify, report, and respond to those targeted by hate violence,” said Greenblatt. “ADL calls on the FBI and Department of Justice to take similar steps with local law enforcement agencies and the courts to address underreporting of hate crimes.”

ADL has updated its interactive hate crime map with the latest FBI data. The map includes links to every hate crime law on the books in the U.S. and FBI hate crime data from 2004-2018 for states and cities with more than 100,000 residents. It gives users the ability to navigate hate crimes data and laws at the national, statewide and city level, and breaks out information on crimes against a broad spectrum of targeted populations.

The FBI’s findings complement ADL’s annual Audit of Anti-Semitic Incidents for 2018. The Audit documented 1,879 criminal and non-criminal incidents against Jews and Jewish institutions. ADL’s Audit counts non-criminal incidents such as hate speech, flier distribution, and other actions that may not be crimes in the state they occur, while the FBI only tracks hate crimes.

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Preceding provided by the Anti-Defamation League.

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  1. San Diego Jewish World received this news release from the American Jewish Committee (AJC):

    The American Jewish Committee (AJC), the leading global Jewish advocacy organization, today launched Translate Hate, an innovative digital resource aimed at enabling Americans of all backgrounds to expose antisemitic tropes and take action against hate speech.

    The launch of Translate Hate (AJC.org/TranslateHate) came the same day the FBI revealed data showing that Jews were the target of a stunning 57.8 percent of all religious bias crimes in 2018, despite making up less than 2 percent of the U.S. population.

    “AJC is calling on all Americans to use Translate Hate to explain, educate, and expose antisemitic tropes that are increasingly invading our daily lives,” said Daniel Elbaum, AJC Chief Advocacy Officer. “From Washington to the world wide web, hate is on the rise and needs to be countered.”

    Presented in the form of an illustrated glossary, Translate Hate lays out 25 terms and expressions that are examples of antisemitism, explains the antisemitic nature of certain words or phrases when used in specific contexts and provides brief histories of their harmful usage. The resource also offers users the tools and information they need to report hate speech, whether it is encountered online or in everyday settings.

    Translate Hate is AJC’s latest initiative to raise awareness of the reality and prevalence of antisemitism in America and to mobilize the general population to join the fight to eradicate hatred of Jews. It follows on the October 23 release of AJC’s groundbreaking survey of American Jews’ perceptions of and experiences of antisemitism in the United States. The unprecedented national study found that 88% of American Jews believe antisemitism is a problem in the U.S. today, and 84% percent say it has increased over the past five years. Approximately a third of American Jews say they have been the targets of antisemitism and seven out of ten say their Jewish institutions have taken concrete protective measures due to the threat of antisemitism.

    AJC’s efforts to combat antisemitism across America and around the world include building alliances with other faith and ethnic groups, raising awareness of rising antisemitism in Europe and the United States, and advocating for policy solutions on local, state, national, and international levels.

    Individuals are encouraged to use the hashtag #TranslateHate when speaking out against usage of any of the terms in the Translate Hate glossary.

    “Everyone, not only Jews, should take responsibility in confronting the menace of antisemitism,” said Elbaum. “Translate Hate educates the general population to identify antisemitic language and images, and to call them out without hesitation.”

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