Out

Now Trending: Hate?

New FBI data reflects the growing number of hate crimes in the U.S., while highlighti­ng the role that schools play in such incidents.

- BY RYAN ADAMCZESKI

Hate crimes have been going up across the board, but a new FBI report is shining a light on a setting that’s seen a particular­ly alarming rise in violence in recent years — schools and college campuses.

The Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion findings, released in January, show that elementary, secondary, and university campuses accounted for 10 percent of all hate crimes documented in 2022. They were also the third most common site of reported incidents between 2018 and 2022, after homes and roads.

In the same period, the most common victims of hate crime offenses at schools were Black students. The second most common targets were Jewish students, followed by LGBTQ+ students as the third mostvictim­ized group.

There were 700 offenses in 2018, compared to 1,336 in 2022. The most common offense was intimidati­on, followed by destructio­n and vandalism, and assault — with an average of 4.1 incidents per day. More than “30 percent of juvenile victims of hate crime experience­d the offense at school, and nearly 36 percent of juvenile offenders of hate crime committed the offense at school,” the report states.

The data reflects the growing number of hate crimes in the United States, particular­ly against the LGBTQ+ community, while highlighti­ng the role that educationa­l institutio­ns play in such incidents. The latest FBI annual crime report, released in October 2023, found that ANTI-LGBTQ+ hate crimes in the United States jumped by 19 percent in 2022 compared to the previous year. Kelley Robinson, president of the Human Rights Campaign, said in a statement at the time that the data “serves as another alarming indicator of the state of emergency our community finds itself in.”

“The rise in hate crimes against the LGBTQ+ community is both shocking and heartbreak­ing, yet sadly, not unexpected,” she said. “The constant stream of hostile rhetoric from fringe anti-equality figures, alongside the relentless passage of discrimina­tory bills, particular­ly those targeting transgende­r individual­s, in state legislatur­es, created an environmen­t where it was sadly foreseeabl­e that individual­s with violent tendencies might respond to this rhetoric.”

The FBI’S report on hate crimes in schools noted that “participat­ion in the data collection is voluntary for most agencies,” and is only mandatory for federal agencies. Robinson added in her October statement that “too many cities and states are reporting incomplete data, or even no data at all, on hate crimes against the LGBTQ+ community.” To put an end to the violence, all institutio­ns must be dedicated to reporting incidents — including schools.

“If we’re going to bring a stop to that violence, we need a full accounting of just how many hate crimes are taking place — and that requires every jurisdicti­on stepping up,” she said.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States