In 2016, 13,478 law enforcement agencies (88% of agencies participating) either did not report or reported zero hate crimes to the FBI.
Reporting a Hate Crime
The message of a hate crime is that “people like you” are not welcome or safe here. Physical assaults, acts of vandalism, and threats of violence can send shockwaves of fear and uncertainty through targeted communities. When law enforcement commits to accurately reporting and consistently responding to hate crimes and bias incidents, it can: demonstrate support for victims and all members of the community; increase public safety; and help prevent future hate crimes.
Hate crimes targeted at people based on their perceived race, color, national origin, gender, gender identity, sexual orientation, religion, and/or disability are a widespread problem in communities across the United States – but an acute discrepancy exists between the number of actual hate crimes committed, and the number officially reported to the FBI.
This Hate Crimes Reporting Gap presents formidable challenges for law enforcement, including:
- Hate and bias crimes can escalate if not identified, addressed, and tracked;
- Without accurate data, cities cannot allocate appropriate resources to address tensions and violence in communities; and
- Inadequate response to hate crimes can leave affected communities feeling unheard and unsafe.
Hate Crime: A criminal act motivated by hate or bias on the basis of race, color, national origin, gender, gender identity, sexual orientation, religion, or disability.
Within law enforcement agencies, some of the factors related to underreporting are:
- UCR reporting to the federal government is voluntary.
- Public officials may fear increased numbers reflect poorly on the community.
- Officers and prosecutors may need training to identify, investigate, and accurately report hate crimes and bias incidents.
To overcome these obstacles, law enforcement agencies should:
- Establish a culture, from top leadership to rank-and-file, that prioritizes clear, decisive response to hate crimes.
- Invest in quality training for new recruits and ongoing training for all department officers.
- Communicate to officers, investigators, and the public that increased reporting can not only bring justice to victims and communities, but it can also strengthen community trust in law enforcement.
Another area of concern is that most hate crimes are never reported to law enforcement in the first place.
Common reasons for this include:
- Communities targeted for hate may not feel safe or comfortable reporting hate crimes to law enforcement.
- Long-standing distrust among some communities leads victims to believe law enforcement will be unwilling or unable to help.
- Immigrant communities may fear deportation or other consequences if they step forward.
- Victims who speak different languages or have disabilities may not report due to cumbersome, inaccessible hate crime reporting procedures.
- Individuals and targeted communities may fear retaliation if they report incidents.
To build trust and help people feel safe reporting hate crimes and bias incidents, agencies should:
- Communicate to the public that you take hate crimes and bias incidents seriously.
- Demonstrate a consistent commitment to protecting all members of the community.
- Conduct outreach outside of crisis situations to develop positive relationships with diverse populations, and create partnerships with organizations that represent communities targeted for hate. Community outreach dialogues should address questions like, “In addition to making a 911 emergency call, who is the point of contact in this community to alert if there is a hate crime or bias incident?” and, “Who is the point of contact if a member of the community has a question about local law enforcement’s hate crime reporting practices, response, or prevention activities?”
- Create accessible and multilingual reporting procedures, and accept reports of bias incidents as well as hate crimes. Easy, transparent reporting procedures encourage victims and other residents to reach out after an incident.
- Conduct a public affairs campaign to publicize a telephone hotline and online information about reporting.
The Problem of Hate in Communities
The fear and insecurity caused by hate crimes not only hurts targeted individuals, but also can negatively affect entire communities, driving decisions about where to live and work, or how often to participate in the community.
The response of law enforcement to hate incidents or hate crimes can strengthen the trust between community and law enforcement that is essential to public safety. Because of the unique ways in which hate crimes impact entire communities, if law enforcement does not respond effectively to hate incidents and hate crimes, it can significantly undermine trust.
Victims of Hate Crimes Need Support
One of the distinguishing features of hate crimes is that perpetrators target a victim because of their actual or perceived identity. Researchers have analyzed how hate crimes “hurt more” than non-bias motivated crimes, in part because bias-motivated crimes can inflict physical, mental, and emotional harm, and can affect behavior of victims. (Citation: Pezzella.) FBI 2016 hate crime statistics indicate that hate crimes are most often motivated by race, with religion and sexual orientation being the second and third most common motivations.
Another characteristic of many hate crimes is the extra degree of violence and cruelty not as common in, for instance, economic crimes. Even though a bias-motivated crime does not require extreme violence to cause fear within a vulnerable community, research has shown that attacks motivated by bias tend to be more violent than attacks that arise out of other circumstances. According to the 2017 BJS report, Hate Crime Victimization, 2004 – 2015:
Overall, about 90% of NCVS-reported hate crimes involved violence, and about 29% were serious violent crimes (rape or sexual assault, robbery, and aggravated assault). During 2011-15, violent crime accounted for a higher percentage of hate (90%) than nonhate (25%) crime victimizations. The majority of hate crimes were simple assaults (62%), followed by aggravated assault (18%), robbery (8%), and theft (7%).
For all of these reasons, law enforcement must be especially attentive to individuals targeted for hate crimes. Law enforcement, victim advocates, and prosecutors should make special efforts to connect with victims of hate crimes and targeted communities, recognizing that fear can permeate throughout communities.
"Victims of bias crimes tend to take twice as long to recover on an emotional level, because it’s a very personal attack upon them -- be it because of their skin color, sexual orientation, or religion. These crimes are message crimes, not just to that one victim. We really have an entire community that’s victimized when one person of a certain group is targeted because of who they are."
— San Diego County, CA Deputy District Attorney Oscar Garcia
It is Important to Document and Report Bias and to Investigate and Prosecute Hate Crimes
Because hate crimes can devastate entire communities, not only the individuals targeted, when hate crimes occur, it is important that they be recognized for what they are. This is why crimes motivated by bias should always be reported as hate crimes and why prosecution for hate crimes should be pursued wherever possible.
State hate crime laws provide authority to state and local law enforcement officials and prosecutors to investigate and prosecute hate crimes. Federal hate crimes laws provide authority to the FBI and federal prosecutors to investigate and prosecute hate crimes.
From a legal standpoint, bias motivation is the key element of a hate crime. Every criminal statute that addresses hate crimes includes a central element of bias motivation. As a result, law enforcement officers need to look for what the FBI Hate Crime Data Collection Guidelines and Training Manual refers to as, “sufficient objective facts to lead a reasonable and prudent person to conclude that the offender’s actions were motivated, in whole or in part, by bias.” A law enforcement officer should look for and note “bias indicators,” or facts that suggest the possibility of a bias motive.
When this element is written into a criminal statute, it can make the crime more complicated to prove, and for this reason, some prosecutors are reluctant to charge perpetrators with hate crimes. However, a conviction under such statutes typically comes with harsher penalties. Prosecutors should bring hate crime charges where the evidence and the available statutes make this possible. Convictions under these statutes send an important message to targeted communities and to would-be perpetrators that the larger community is stronger than hate.
When law enforcement and public officials recognize an act of hate for what it is, they acknowledge and validate the experience of the victim and affirm the status of the victim as a full member of the community.
(adapted from A Prosecutor’s Stand: Important Facts for Law Enforcement Officers Leading Discussion of the Film, available online from the COPS Office.)
Community Stories: Why Confront Hate?
What leaders say and do can make all the difference in building resilience in the face of hate. These local examples demonstrate how law enforcement officials can help lead meaningful changes in their communities.
who didn’t report the hate crime thought police could not or would not help, or would create problems for them.
“If a police chief doesn't take a visible and active role, then there is an assumption that everything is alright. And these hate groups have learned through experience that if a community doesn't respond, then the community accepts. Silence is acceptance to them.”
– Former Billings, MT Police Chief Wayne Inman