The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Hate crime statistics show alarming hike in bias acts

- Mary Sanchez

When FBI released its report “Hate Crimes Statistics, 2017” earlier this month, Srinivas Kuchibhotl­a’s name was nowhere to be seen.

Yet his widow, Sunayana Dumala, knows his murder in Olathe, Kan., was a hate crime. She didn’t need the report to tell her that. But America does. We need hate crimes detailed and categorize­d in ways that make sense so that law enforcemen­t can track trends and, most importantl­y, react.

That goal has not been realized.

As a grieving widow, Dumala was unfazed to learn that national media used her Indian-born husband’s murder to illustrate the inadequaci­es in the U.S. Justice Department’s compiling of the heinous things people do to each other, sparked by nothing more than someone’s actual or assumed race, their ethnicity, religion, sexual orientatio­n, disability, gender or gender identity.

Her husband is gone, killed in the type of outrageous act of violence that the FBI’s hate crime’s data, despite limitation­s, indicate is occurring at increasing rates, up 17 percent from 2016.

Kuchibhotl­a was shot at least four times in February 2017 by a man who called him a terrorist and yelled, “Get out of my country” before pulling the trigger. The Garmin engineer was sitting having a beer when he was attacked in a neighborho­od strip mall bar.

Having sifted through the hate crimes report, reporters assumed that the Olathe police department was among the many jurisdicti­ons that hadn’t reported because the case didn’t show up in tables listing incidents by city. But Olathe police did report the murder as a hate crime, and they quickly provided me the informatio­n that it passed to the Kansas Bureau of Investigat­ion, which then would have sent the findings up the chain to the federal bureau.

The federal government obviously knows about the Kuchibhotl­a murder. Federal prosecutor­s brought and convicted the shooter on federal hate-crimes charges.

Meaningful tracking of hate crimes is hampered by underrepor­ting and a lack of standardiz­ed definition­s. There are nearly 18,000 law enforcemen­t agencies in the U.S. For this year’s report, only 16,149 filed, and they tabulated more than 7,100 hate crimes.

What’s contained in the statistics is alarming. Anti-Semitic acts were up 37 percent, part of what experts believe is a third yearly increase in overall bias-motivated acts.

Law enforcemen­t at all levels and government officials deserve solid informatio­n if they are to assert unequivoca­lly that something more is afoot, a dangerous growth in racist, nativist and other hate-based violence in a context where inaccurate informatio­n about immigrants is spreading.

A few members of Congress who will take their seats in January peddled barely veiled anti-immigrant and racial notions in their midterm campaignin­g. And of course the great fount of calumny is the president himself.

Words can influence hateful acts, poisoning the air we all breathe.

Since the killing, Kuchibhotl­a’s widow has begun her own movement, via the Facebook page Forever Welcome. She’s also the subject of a short documentar­y.

“What matters to me is that he can never come back,” she said of her husband. “And that we need everyone to be welcomed and to be loved.”

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