Los Angeles Times

Hotline for hate crimes is urged

Atlanta spa attacks underscore need for a statewide reporting system, legislator says.

- By Maria L. La Ganga

Assemblyma­n Al Muratsuchi didn’t need any more evidence in support of his recent bill, AB 557, the one he hopes will create a statewide hotline for victims and witnesses to report hate crimes to the California Department of Justice.

Ever since the pandemic began, there’s been a surge in hate crimes against Asian Americans, rooted in the mistaken belief that they are to blame for the coronaviru­s.

That former President Trump and other elected officials describe it as the “China virus” and “kung flu” has only created more hostility.

On Tuesday, a white gunman shot eight people to death at three Asian spas in Georgia. Six were women of Asian descent.

Robert Aaron Long, a 21year-old from Woodstock, Ga., was charged Wednesday with eight counts of murder and one count of aggravated assault.

Law enforcemen­t agents in Cherokee County said Long confessed to the killings. He told investigat­ors that he suffered from a “sex addiction” and lashed out to rid his world of temptation.

The attacks provoked fear and anger in Asian American communitie­s from coast to coast. The three spas Long targeted all advertised staff of “Asian” and “internatio­nal” descent.

The Georgia killings are “just the latest example of the difficulty of getting into the mind of the hate crime perpetrato­r,” Muratsuchi (D-Rolling Hills Estates) said in an interview. “Is it more of a crime against women? Is it a crime against Asians?

“There’s a lot of signs of the intersecti­on of all these different targets of hate when you have this perpetrato­r going to these Asian massage spas,” the former prosecutor said. “That highlights the difficulty in proving intent.”

The day of the shootings, the advocacy group Stop AAPI hate released a report showing that nearly 4,000 racially motivated attacks against Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders had been reported during the pandemic.

And that’s probably just a fraction of the assaults that occurred, the group said.

“The president of the United States sets the tone and sets the message for all Americans,” Muratsuchi said. “And so that’s why

Asian Americans across the country truly welcomed President Biden when he started off his recent [primetime address to the nation] condemning the spike in anti-Asian crimes…. From the president on down, we all need to raise awareness that this is just flat-out wrong.”

Assembly Bill 557 began life as a modest proposal to simply create brochures for state agencies to give to hate crime victims.

Since its introducti­on Feb. 11, Muratsuchi has broadened its scope.

He plans to amend it to include a toll-free hotline for hate crimes as well as an online reporting system to allow victims and witnesses to report incidents anonymousl­y.

Similar hotlines have been created in other states and in California municipali­ties including San Francisco and Alameda County.

Assemblyma­n David Chiu (D-San Francisco) plans to co-sponsor the bill. Chiu introduced similar legislatio­n in 2017, but it died in committee.

The hotline is for hate crimes of all kinds, against people of all ethnicitie­s, races, genders, religions and sexual orientatio­ns, the assemblyme­n said.

But the pandemic and the rise in assaults on Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders was the catalyst for its creation.

“Over the course of this pandemic, we have seen a horrific uptick in hate crimes targeting our API communitie­s,” Chiu said in a statement in February. “We cannot stand idly by and allow this to continue.”

 ?? Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times ?? DEMONSTRAT­ORS gather Friday outside Berendo Street Baptist Church to denounce hate against the Asian American and Pacific Islander communitie­s.
Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times DEMONSTRAT­ORS gather Friday outside Berendo Street Baptist Church to denounce hate against the Asian American and Pacific Islander communitie­s.

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