The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Georgia Legislatur­e should pass needed hate crimes law

- By Dov Wilker

The historic coastal city of Brunswick — once called a “model Southern city” for its racial harmony — reported zero hate crimes in the latest FBI statistics. Not a one. Perhaps that is because Georgia does not have any legal mechanism to define and track hate crimes.

Without any capacity to record officially hate crimes, it is unclear how many incidents in Brunswick targeted African Americans or how many suspects got away with it before Ahmaud Arbery was murdered in broad daylight. Law enforcemen­t took two months to arrest the white men now charged with murder and aggravated assault. Other states might add a charge of committing a hate crime, but not in Georgia, where the Supreme Court overturned a law in 2004, and two subsequent hate crime bills failed to pass the Legislatur­e.

The brutal killing of Arbery underscore­s the need for immediate passage of Georgia’s proposed hate crime law, HB426. It also highlights the urgency of the National Opposition to Hate, Assaults, and Threats to Equality (NO HATE) Act.

The bipartisan bill would improve hate crime reporting with grants to empower state and local government­s to train law enforcemen­t, create reporting hotlines, direct resources to minority communitie­s and conduct public educationa­l forums. In exchange for federal funds, agencies would be required to submit hate crimes data to the FBI. Currently, reporting is voluntary, not mandatory.

My office hears about hate crimes too regularly — spraypaint­ed swastikas, bricks through windows, verbal and physical attacks — but prosecutor­s will not call them hate crimes. Since tracking hate crimes is lacking, Georgia law enforcemen­t is unable to make strategic decisions that protect the most vulnerable.

Brunswick has a population of more than 16,400, but a dozen Georgia cities of more than 50,000 each also reported no hate crimes to the FBI. In Atlanta, police and prosecutor­s apply an ordinance for “crimes manifestin­g evidence of prejudice.”

Georgia is one of only five states with no statute to adequately prosecute offenders who target someone based on race, religion, sexual orientatio­n or other protected category. The federal NO HATE Act would help fill a void here and in the other woefully deficient four states — Arkansas, South Carolina, Indiana and Wyoming.

The American Jewish Committee’s landmark survey on antisemiti­sm last year revealed that 75% of American Jews targeted by an antisemiti­c attack or remark didn’t report the incident. If they did, only 3% told police. Yet, the existing FBI data still shows that Jews and African Americans respective­ly are the No. 1 victims of religiousl­y and racially motivated hate crimes.

The NO HATE Act offers assurance to minority communitie­s that concerns about their safety are counted on a national scale, which could encourage more reporting of incidents.

Before the U.S. House voted to pass the NO HATE ACT, the Congressio­nal Caucus on Black Jewish Relations, co-chaired by Congressma­n John Lewis, issued a powerful declaratio­n of support for the measure.

“We know all too well the impact of fear-filled hate on our communitie­s and our country,” the caucus said. “Hate crimes will continue to spread if left unaddresse­d. For our country to thrive during this turbulent time, each of our communitie­s must not only feel safe but know that their concerns are counted on a national scale.”

“The Jewish community has also been the target of conspiracy theories, blaming the

Jewish people for creating the virus,” the statement continued. “These false and spiteful claims further spread racism and antisemiti­sm.”

The pandemic had nothing to do with the brutal murder of Arbery. The 25-year-old was jogging in the Satilla Shores neighborho­od outside Brunswick on February 23 when he was fatally shot.

Greg McMichael, 64, and his son, Travis, 34, were arrested by the Georgia Bureau of Investigat­ion on May 7, but only after a video of the shooting had circulated, and the cold-blooded murder became a national and internatio­nal story. To be sure, if a hate crime law had been in place in Georgia when Arbery was killed, the state would have acted faster. Arbery’s murder is a wake-up call for politician­s to finally recognize a hate crime.

The NO HATE Act was included in the emergency stimulus package adopted on May 15 by the House. The Senate should move expeditiou­sly to approve this vital legislatio­n, so that President Trump can sign it into law.

At the same time, with Gov. Brian Kemp, Lt. Gov. Geoff Duncan and House speaker David Ralston expressing support for the Georgia hate crimes statute, its passage should not be further delayed.

At last, there could be a mechanism that encourages people targeted for who they are to come forward and incentiviz­es state and local law enforcemen­t to make sure the complaint counts.

 ?? ALYSSA POINTER / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM ?? The brutal killing of 25-year-old Ahmaud Arbery near Brunswick after being chased down by armed white men gives new impetus to the need for a hate crimes law in Georgia.
ALYSSA POINTER / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM The brutal killing of 25-year-old Ahmaud Arbery near Brunswick after being chased down by armed white men gives new impetus to the need for a hate crimes law in Georgia.

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