The Telegram (St. John's)

House targets mass shootings, hate crimes

- DAVID MORGAN

WASHINGTON — A month after a white gunman targeting Latinos killed 22 people in El Paso, Texas, the Democratic-led U.S. House Judiciary Committee will consider new legislatio­n to address rising fears about a convergenc­e of mass shootings and hate crimes.

Democrats who control the House of Representa­tives passed gun bills meant to tighten background checks in February, but the legislatio­n stalled in the Republican-led Senate.

Cutting their summer recess short to consider the new measure after back-to-back shootings on the U.s.-mexico border in El Paso and in Dayton, Ohio, Democrats hope to restart the gun-control debate before Congress returns on Sept 9. The panel will consider several bills that include a ban on highcapaci­ty ammunition magazines and “red flag” legislatio­n that would encourage states to confiscate firearms from people deemed a danger to themselves or others.

But only one bill, named the Disarm Hate Act, would seek to use hate crime laws to curb gun violence. The measure, which mirrors laws already on the books in three U.S. states, would prohibit people convicted of certain violent hate crime misdemeano­rs from possessing a gun.

Currently, federal law bars only those convicted of more serious hate crime felony offenses from having guns.

Seventy-two percent of U.S. voters want Congress to do more to reduce gun violence, while a majority view prejudice against immigrants as a very serious problem, according to a Quinnipiac University poll released on Thursday.

But if approved by the committee and adopted by the full House, the measure could have a hard time in the Senate, where Republican aides say discussion­s have focused on background checks and red flag legislatio­n.

The powerful National Rifle Associatio­n, which opposes most gun restrictio­ns, said it sees no reason for Congress to change criminal law to control guns.

“Under current law, our legal and criminal justice systems have the tools to keep firearms out the hands of all dangerous criminals - whatever the motivation for their crime,” NRA spokeswoma­n Catherine Mortensen said in a statement.

But even if it became law, the Disarm Hate Act could prove to be little more than symbolic. Experts estimate there are no more than 1,000 hate crime conviction­s in any given year and that just a small fraction involve misdemeano­rs. And while 45 of the 50 U.S. states have some type of hate crime law on the books, only about 30 have hate crime misdemeano­r offenses.

Still, the bill’s advocates argue that extending the prohibitio­n on firearm possession from hate crime felonies to misdemeano­rs would close an important gap at a time of rising hate crime activity.

Hate crime incidents have climbed 31% since 2014 to their highest level in nearly a decade, according to FBI data that show a 17 per cent jump to 7,175 incidents in 2017. The number of hate crime groups rose 30 per cent from 2014 to 2018, according to the Southern Poverty Law Center.

Experts, meanwhile, say a growing number of mass shootings that involve hate bias could suggest an increasing­ly deadly role for guns in hate crime activity.

“If we start to see more people using guns targeting others because of race, religion, ethnicity, immigratio­n status, it’s going to really change the game for hate crimes,” said Jack Mcdevitt, a leading expert on hate crimes at Northeaste­rn University’s Institute on Race and Justice.

Advocates say extending the ban to misdemeano­rs that involve physical force or a credible threat to personal safety could allow police to intervene early against individual­s who could go on to carry out deadly attacks.

“We know that an early precursor to many of these mass shootings is some hate crime activity,” said U.S. Representa­tive David Cicilline, who introduced the bill, which has 136 Democratic co-sponsors.

“If you look at communitie­s of color, religious minorities or the LGBTQ community, hate crimes against each of these groups have increased,” Cicilline told Reuters.

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