- Hate Crime Defined
- Hate Crime Law in Ohio
- Hate Crime Reporting
- Rersources
Hate crimes are crimes committed because of the victim's race, gender, national origin, religion, sexual orientation or other protected status. The federal government, most states and many localities have enacted laws or regulations to define such acts as separate crimes in themselves or to augment penalties for existing crimes when motivated by hatred or bias. Because definitions vary across jurisdictions, acts as disparate as lynching, assault while calling the victim derogatory names, cross burning or making intimidating threats on the basis of the victim's race or other protected status might be considered hate crimes. Whatever the definition, statistics show that incidences of hate crime were on the rise in the late twentieth century.
On the federal level there is no hate crime law per se, though legislative efforts to enact such a law came close to succeeding in the late 1990s. Prior to 1994, federal prosecutors combating hate crimes depended primarily on civil rights statutes, including those protecting voting activities, fair housing and the enjoyment of public accommodations. In 1994 Congress added to federal authority to prosecute hate crimes by providing sentence enhancements for any existing federal offense if the defendant selected the victim "because of the actual or perceived race, color, religion, national origin, ethnicity, gender, disability or sexual orientation" of the victim. Also in 1994, Congress passed the Violence against Women Act, which provided a civil cause of action for gender-motivated violence. The Supreme Court, however, voted 5 to 4 in United States v. Morrison (2000) to strike down the relevant provisions as being outside Congress's legislative authority under the commerce clause and the Fourteenth Amendment.
During the last two decades of the twentieth century, nearly every state enacted a hate crime law of some kind. Most of these statutes took the form of sentence enhancements for existing crimes. Others defined new substantive criminal offenses or created new private causes of action.
Hate crime statutes raise a number of serious policy and legal questions. Some critics believe that hate crime statutes pose serious First Amendment difficulties by distinguishing among criminals based on their beliefs. Other critics charge that the statutes are unconstitutionally vague or send the inappropriate message that crimes committed for reasons other than bias are not as serious. Supporters of hate crime statutes assert that the constitutional concerns can be surmounted and that the statutes are necessary to make clear society's strong belief that bias-motivated crimes are particularly detrimental to the social fabric.
Bibliography
Jacobs, James B., and Kimberly Potter. Hate Crimes. New York: Oxford University Press, 1998.
"Symposium: Federal Bias Crime Law." Boston University Law Review 80 (2000): 1185–1449.
Wang, Lu-in. Hate Crimes Law. St. Paul: West, 1993. Comprehensive reference source on federal and state hate crime law.
ORC Ann. 2927.12 Defines the offense of "ethnic intimidation" to cover certain offenses committed by reason of the victim's race, color, religion and national origin.
ORC Ann. 2927.11 Covers damage to places of worship, their furnishings, or religious artifacts or sacred texts with the place of worship.
- The number of Ohio law enforcement agencies who submitted the hate crime supplement increased from 443 in 2005 to 493 in 2006, an 11 percent increase.
- Of the 493 Ohio law enforcement agencies who submitted the hate crime supplement, 406 reported no incidents of hate crimes in their jurisdictions.
- The number of hate crime incidents reported by Ohio law enforcement has fluctuated drastically over the past several years. In 2006, 87 Ohio law enforcement agencies reported a total of 300 hate crime incidents, an increase of 70 percent over 2005, but still less than 353 incidents reported in 2004. Nationwide statistics show fluctuation as well, but on a much smaller scale than that shown in Ohio.
- The Ohio hate crime rate of 3.5 incidents per 100,000 population is above the national average of 3.0 incidents per 100,000 population.
- Nationwide, the majority of hate crime incidents, 52 percent, involved racial bias. The remaining incidents involved religion (19 percent), sexual orientation (15 percent), ethnicity/national origin (13 percent), and disability (1 percent).
- In Ohio, 61 percent of hate crime incidents were related to race, followed by ethnicity/national origin (15 percent), religion (11 percent), sexual orientation (11 percent), and disability (two percent).
- Nationwide data on the specific types of racial bias show that 66 percent of such incidents were anti-Black and 22 percent were anti-White. Fifty-eight percent of ethnicity bias incidents (or 7 percent of all bias incidents) were anti-Hispanic.
- Nationwide data show that 66 percent of religious bias incidents were anti-Jewish, while 11 percent were anti-Islamic.
- Of the 87 Ohio law enforcement agencies reporting incidents of hate crime in their jurisdictions, Columbus accounted for 27 percent of all the reported incidents.
- Nationwide, 60 percent of all hate crime offenses were crimes against persons. The majority of these offenses involved intimidation (46 percent), simple assault (32 percent) and aggravated assault (22 percent). There were three murders as a result of a hate bias.
- Nationwide, of the 40 percent of hate crime offenses committed against property, the overwhelming majority, 81 percent, involved destruction, damage, or vandalism.
Further Information
http://www.publicsafety.ohio.gov/links/ocjs_hatecrimes2009.pdf
http://www.law.umaryland.edu/marshall/usccr/documents/cr12h284z.pdf
http://www.fbi.gov/news/stories/2010/november/hate_112210/hate_112210
http://www.fbi.gov/about-us/cjis/ucr/ucr


