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Responding to Hate

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Title: Responding to Hate


1
Responding to Hate
  • The Role of Human or Civil Rights Commissions in
    Hate Crime Response

2
Jake Beckwith AmeriCorps VISTA Iowa Human and
Civil Rights Project of AmeriCorps VISTA and the
Iowa Civil Rights Commission May,
2008 jacob.beckwith_at_iowa.gov (515) 281-3041
The author and Iowa Civil Rights Commission give
expressed permission for the use or publication
of this material to all relevant local agencies.
3
Roles and Community Response
  • The responsibility of investigating a reported
    hate crime belongs to law enforcement.
  • The responsibility of charging and prosecuting
    the offenders belongs to the prosecuting
    attorney.
  • The role of facilitating a proper response can
    belong to a local Human Rights or Civil Rights
    Commission (HRC).

4
Why a response is important
  • Silence means acceptance
  • If we do not respond to hate crime, we send a
    message to the victim and perpetrator that
    intolerance is okay.
  • A report released by the U.S. Department of
    Justice and the U.S. Attorney General in 2001
    indicates that many hate crimes are escalations
    of other incidents that do not get a proper
    response (Wessler and Moss, 5).
  • A U.S. Department of Justice 2005 study of hate
    crime reporting indicates that only about 40 of
    all bias motivated incidents are reported to
    authorities (Harlow, 2).

5
Iowa Demographic Outlook
  • The population of Iowa is very rapidly becoming
    more diverse (all stats from U.S. Census).
  • The Latino-American population has increased by
    30 since 2000.
  • The Asian-American community has grown by 19.
  • African-American community has grown by nearly
    10.
  • Estimates project that by 2010, 90 of all new
    growth in Iowa will be attributed to minority
    groups.
  • From 2000-2006 minorities accounted for
    approximately 60 of growth in Iowa.

6
Hate Crime Trends
  • African Americans are the most frequent victims
    of hate crime in Iowa, accounting for nearly 60
    of reported hate crime victims. Homosexual men
    are the second most targeted group (Iowa DPS).
  • Hate Crime against Latinos nationally is up 30
    in the last 5 years (FBI).
  • Latinos account for the largest and fastest
    growing minority in Iowa.
  • The number of annually reported hate crimes in
    Iowa is around 30, except for a jump in 2002 when
    48 hate incidents were reported (Iowa DPS).

7
Hate in Iowa
A sample of Hate in Iowa for 2007
  • Des Moines (Assault) Jassimen Dobbins and Angela
    Wade, both 19, were charged with first-degree
    burglary and third-degree arson for allegedly
    beating a gay teenager with a bottle, stabbing
    him with a fork, and stealing 5, his ATM card
    and his driver's license before setting his bag
    on fire.
  • Ottumwa (Criminal Mischief) Matthew A. Lanman,
    17, was charged with fourth-degree criminal
    mischief as a hate crime for allegedly hanging a
    dead opossum and a note insulting Blacks and
    Latinos in a school bathroom.
  • Marshalltown (Vandalism, Theft) Racial slurs and
    graffiti were spray painted and the familys
    Christmas presents stolen at the home of a
    minority family supporting Barack Obama.
  • Cedar Rapids (Vandalism) Racial Slurs, swastikas,
    and threats including a hangmans platform and
    the words Leave Now were painted on the home of
    a couple living on SW Mallory Street on Christmas
    Eve.

8
Elements of an Effective Response
  • Reporting
  • Reported to local law enforcement, or authority
    for investigation.
  • Receiving and/or publicizing reports from law
    enforcement of bias related incidents.
  • Victim Support
  • Reassurance, safety, and listening
  • Developing a list of procedures or dos and
    donts
  • Connecting to resources
  • Iowa Attorney Generals Victim Assistance Program
  • Assessing needs (Medical, Emotional, et cetera)
  • Public Denunciation
  • Action that condemns the hate crime, takes a
    position against intolerance, supports the
    targeted community
  • Should be proportionate to the crime

9
What a Human or Civil Rights Commission can do
  • Open up a dialogue with community partners such
    as law enforcement, city officials, organizations
    and schools about networking against bias.
  • Sharing incident reports
  • Law enforcement can notify HRC or City, set up
    communication chain with other community
    stakeholders
  • Work with schools on combating bias and hate.
  • Many universities have bias response teams (UNI)
  • Work with community schools to enforce the Safe
    Schools Law
  • Discuss obtaining training on hate crimes such as
    is offered by the US DOJ Community Relations
    Service or ADL(see resources)
  • Possibly for Law Enforcement, the community,
    schools et cetera
  • Discuss establishing a response plan and policy
  • Similar to fire plan

10
Best Practices
Cities
  • Advocate to the city council to create a
    statement and proclamation to support social and
    racial tolerance and end bigotry.
  • Oak Park, Illinois
  • Create a pledge to diversity or racial justice
    and encourage people or businesses to sign on.
  • Beloit, Wisconsin
  • Establishing and publishing a hate crime response
    plan.
  • Fargo, ND Edina, MN Shoreview, MN Dubuque, IA
  • Start a bias crime network or task force
  • Flint, Michigan

11
Best Practice
Hate Crime Network or Task Force
  • Some cities have established a network against
    bias.
  • Incorporates all the elements of hate crime
    response.
  • Consists of representatives of community
    stakeholders such as schools, city government,
    civic organizations.
  • Set goals to facilitate hate crime reporting.
  • Sharing incident reports with other
    organizations.
  • In the incident of a hate crime, they will have
    someone available to contact and support the
    victim.
  • Would determine and plan an appropriate public
    response.

12
Public Response
  • Develop a Toolkit of options (Public Forum,
    Vigil, Statement in the Media)
  • Iowa Civil Rights Commission Toolkit
    www.state.ia.us/government/crc/

Promotion and Prevention
  • Schools
  • Safe schools law
  • Programs that encourage tolerance
  • Community Projects
  • Programs encourage tolerance/ cultural
    understanding
  • Distributing Information and Educating
  • Brochures, posters, news articles, workshops

13
Resources
  • Anti-Defamation League
  • Blueprint for combating bias and hate crime
  • Regional Office Omaha, Nebraska - (402) 333-1303
  • Southern Poverty Law Center
  • Intelligence Report
  • Tolerance.org
  • Stopthehate.org
  • Campus Hate Crime Resource
  • U.S. Dept. of Justice Community Relations
    Service
  • Regional Office Kansas City, MO (816) 426-7434
  • Statistics
  • FBI Uniform Crime Report (Available at FBI
    website)
  • Iowa Department of Public Safety Uniform Crime
    Report

14
Sources
  • Wessler, Stephen and Moss, Margaret. Hate Crime
    on Campus The problem and efforts to confront
    it. Bureau of Justice Assistance. October 2001.
  • FBI Uniform Crime Report, 2006.
  • Harlow, Caroline Wolf. Hate Crime Reported by
    Victims and Police. Bureau of Justice Statistics.
    November 2005.
  • Iowa Department of Public Safety Uniform Crime
    Report, 2005.
  • Lockyer, Bill. Reporting Hate Crimes. California
    Attorney Generals Office. 2003.
  • Hate Crime Report. LA County Commission on Human
    Relations. 2005.
  • Hate Crime Network and Community Response.
    Michigan Alliance Against Hate Crime. November,
    2007. www.miahcc.com
  • U.S. Census Bureau, 2006. www.census.gov
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