Crime
The FBI released Hate Crime Statistics 2013, the
Uniform Crime Reporting (UCR) Program’s first publication to present data
collected under the Matthew Shepard and James Byrd, Jr. Hate Crime Prevention
Act of 2009. Accordingly, the bias categories of gender (male and female) and
gender identity (transgender and gender nonconforming) have been added to the
other bias categories of race, religion, disability, sexual orientation, and
ethnicity.
December
20, 2014 at 15:00
The FBI released Hate Crime Statistics 2013, the
Uniform Crime Reporting (UCR) Program’s first publication to present data
collected under the Matthew Shepard and James Byrd, Jr. Hate Crime Prevention
Act of 2009. Accordingly, the bias categories of gender (male and female) and
gender identity (transgender and gender nonconforming) have been added to the
other bias categories of race, religion, disability, sexual orientation, and
ethnicity.
According
to Government Security News, other new aspects of the report
include the presentation of age categories to indicate whether hate crimes were
committed by or directed toward juveniles.
Hate
Crime Statistics 2013 includes data about the offenses, victims, offenders, and
locations of the bias-motivated incidents reported by law enforcement agencies
throughout the nation.
Highlights
of Hate Crime Statistics 2013 follow.
Law
enforcement agencies reported 5,928 criminal incidents involving 6,933 offenses
as being motivated by a bias toward a particular race, gender, gender identity,
religion, disability, sexual orientation, or ethnicity in 2013.
There
were 5,922 single-bias incidents involving 7,230 victims, compared with 7,164
victims of hate crimes nationwide in 2012. A percent distribution of victims by
bias type showed that 48.5% of victims were targeted because of the offenders’
racial bias, 20.8% were victimized because of the offenders’ sexual-orientation
bias, 17.4% were targeted because of the offenders’ religious bias, and 11.1%
were victimized due to ethnicity bias. Victims targeted because of the
offenders’ bias against disabilities accounted for 1.4% of victims of
single-bias incidents; gender identity, 0.5%; and gender, 0.3%. There were six
multiple-bias hate crime incidents involving 12 victims.
Of
the 4,430 hate crime offenses classified as crimes against persons in 2013,
intimidation accounted for 43.5%, simple assault accounted for 38.8%, and
aggravated assault for 16.6 %. Five murders and 21 rapes were reported as hate crimes.
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