The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

In general, hate crimes cases difficult to prove

If there’s no ‘track record’ of racism or other bias, it’s ‘an uphill battle,’ a law professor says.

- By Maya T. Prabhu maya.prabhu@ajc.com

While the shooting death of an unarmed black man by a white father and son in Brunswick has reignited the call for Georgia to join 46 other states by passing a hate-crimes law, proving the killing was motivated by hate would be an uphill battle, legal experts say.

Greg and Travis McMichael, 64 and 34, told police they believed Ahmaud Arbery was a burglary suspect when they saw him running through their Satilla Shores neighborho­od near Brunswick in February, according to police.

The McMichaels grabbed a shotgun and a handgun, got into their truck, and followed and confronted Arbery before the younger McMichael shot him.

Arbery, 25, died at the scene. Arbery’s family says he was out jogging when he was confronted

and shot. The McMichaels have been charged with murder and aggravated assault.

Local politician­s and national celebritie­s alike have argued that Arbery’s death was a result of the fact that he was black. A 2000 hate-crimes law was struck down by the Georgia Supreme Court in 2004 for being “unconstitu­tionally vague.”

The U.S. Department of Justice announced that it was considerin­g hate-crimes charges against the McMichaels.

But Georgia State University law professor Jessica Cino said proving the killing is a hate crime would be challengin­g.

“A hate crime itself is basically defined as a crime where a suspect or defendant targets a particular victim because they are in a specific group,” said Cino, who specialize­s in criminal law. “A hate crime is difficult to prove. If they don’t have a track record, if they have not been really vocal about (targeting a specific group) on social media — that is an uphill battle that the Department of Justice may not want to undertake in this case.”

Still, many lawmakers have called for Georgia to pass a hatecrimes bill that passed the state House last year before stalling in

the Senate.

House Speaker David Ralston, a Blue Ridge Republican and attorney, has urged the Senate to pass House Bill 426, but its future is unclear as lawmakers prepare to

return to the Capitol sometime next month to complete the legislativ­e session that was suspended in March to slow the spread of the novel coronaviru­s.

Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Jesse Stone, a Waynesboro Republican, said some senators oppose the proposed law because they believe it could limit the discretion of trial judges to impose sentences and also because of a “philosophi­cal concern” about requiring different punishment­s for similar crimes. The bill would have to make it through Stone’s committee before it could receive a floor vote in the Senate.

HB 426 would give sentencing guidelines for anyone convicted of targeting a victim based on race, color, religion, national origin, sexual orientatio­n, gender, mental disability or physical disability.

In the case of Arbery, attorneys for Gregory McMichael said Friday that racism did not play a role in the shooting.

State Sen. Harold Jones, an Augusta Democrat and attorney, said he believes it’s possible to prove the McMichaels were motivated to follow and shoot Arbery after seeing him on a home constructi­on site because of Arbery’s race.

“(The McMichaels) deprived Mr. Arbery of any agency of just being a normal person and all the things a normal person might be doing and assumed immediatel­y that this has to be a criminal act,” Jones said. “We know that was the assumption because they had firearms, were carrying them and used them.”

State Rep. Chuck Efstration, a Dacula Republican who sponsored the bill, said he believed Georgia’s legislatio­n balanced the need to pass a law that protects marginaliz­ed groups while not eroding changes made under former Gov. Nathan Deal to overhaul the criminal justice system — such as moving away from having mandatory minimum sentences for certain crimes.

If HB 426 were state law, a person convicted of a crime and proved to have been motivated by bias would face punishment ranging from three months to a year and a fine of up to $5,000 for a misdemeano­r offense to at least two years in prison for a felony offense.

The bill emerged from the House last year by a 96-64 margin, with many Republican lawmakers who voted against it saying it placed a higher value on victims of certain crimes. A bill must receive 91 votes to pass the House.

Efstration, who is an attorney, agreed that proving that someone is motivated to commit a crime due to bias can be difficult.

“There is a very high burden in this bill for determinin­g that a hate crime is appropriat­e,” he said. “Having such a strict requiremen­t is a safeguard against inappropri­ate applicatio­n and, rather, helps to ensure that prosecutor­s and law enforcemen­t only seek this when it’s appropriat­e.”

Even though hate crimes are typically hard to prove, they are important laws to have on the books, said Allison Padilla-Goodman, vice president of the Southern division of the Anti-Defamation League. The group has pushed Georgia lawmakers to pass legislatio­n for several years.

“The mere act of investigat­ion is something that has powerful meaning and implicatio­ns to people in the community,” Padilla-Goodman said. “I think that people are just having moment after moment of being jolted, like, ‘Why do we not take people’s identity seriously in Georgia and why do we not actually investigat­e and prosecute these things appropriat­ely?’ ”

State Rep. Josh McLaurin, an Atlanta Democrat and attorney, said while he doesn’t believe the publicly known facts prove that Arbery’s killing was a hate crime, he said passage of the proposed legislatio­n would acknowledg­e that racism kills.

“And it is pervasive enough in the violence we often see that the community needs to have a legal response to it to express in the strongest possible terms that we condemn racism-fueled crimes in the state,” he said.

And that’s a move Efstration said he hopes the Legislatur­e will take.

“The Senate is in a position to act on this quickly,” he said. “I think that that would send a strong message that the General Assembly takes this issue very seriously, and with the suspension of the legislativ­e session we’re in a unique position to pass and send this bill to the governor’s desk.”

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Jesse Stone
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Harold Jones

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