Porterville Recorder

California hate crimes up; blacks, Jews, gay men targets

- By DON THOMPSON

SACRAMENTO — The number of hate crimes in California increased about 11 percent last year, the second consecutiv­e double-digit increase, but the overall number still was a third lower total than a decade ago, the state’s attorney general reported Monday.

Blacks, Jews and gay men were among the most frequent targets.

There were 931 such crimes reported statewide, nearly 100 more than in 2015. That equated to about one for every 42,000 California­ns.

By comparison, there were 1,426 hate crimes reported in 2007, when the state had about 3 million fewer people than the more than 39 million in 2016.

More than half the crimes reported last year were based on the victim’s race or ethnicity. Hate crimes involving a victim’s sexual orientatio­n increased about 10 percent, to 207 last year, with about three-quarters of those targeting gay men.

Less than 20 percent were because of the victim’s religion, and the number declined last year. Jews, not Muslims, were the most common targets even amid heated rhetoric by Donald Trump during the presidenti­al campaign regarding potential terror threats from Muslims.

There are no statewide statistics on hate crimes in California since Trump took office in January.

It’s the first back-toback increase in hate crimes reported in California since 1996, though the number is less than half the spike that occurred in the aftermath of the terrorist attacks of September 2001, when Jews also were the leading religious target, said criminolog­ist Brian Levin, a former New York City police officer who directs the Center for the Study of Hate and Extremism at California State University, San Bernardino.

“The good news is we have a lower number of hate crimes than we have in the past. The bad news is the trend is up,” he said. “People feel disenfranc­hised, and there’s a tribalisti­c tone that has come out.”

He speculated that gay men may be seeing a “spillover effect” from the increased prominence of the LGBT community and discussion­s of same-sex marriages.

Trump has been blamed by many for coarsening the political rhetoric. Those on both sides of the political spectrum agree angry tweets from him and at him could lead some to violence.

 ?? AP PHOTO BY RICH PEDRONCELL­I ?? In this Feb. 1, file photo, Tom Garing cleans up racist graffiti painted on the side of a mosque in what officials are calling an apparent hate crime in Roseville.
AP PHOTO BY RICH PEDRONCELL­I In this Feb. 1, file photo, Tom Garing cleans up racist graffiti painted on the side of a mosque in what officials are calling an apparent hate crime in Roseville.

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