Hate Crimes Increase For Third Consecutive Year, FBI Reports
Almost 60 percent of hate crimes based on religious bias were motivated by anti-Semitism, the FBI reported on Tuesday as part of its annual Uniform Crime Reporting (UCR) program.
In 2018, the year covered by the FBI’s most recent report, 57.8 percent of religious bias offenses were categorized as anti-Jewish. A total of 896 anti-Jewish offenses were reported to local and federal law enforcement agencies, forming a data set that is ultimately collected and released by the bureau.
Although thousands of agencies participate in the hate crimes reporting program, such participation is voluntary at the local level, meaning that the data underestimate the larger number of such crimes committed in smaller jurisdictions.
The number of anti-Jewish offenses dropped off in 2018 from the previous year, when there were 976. But the share of offenses directed against Jews or those perceived as Jewish remained consistent. About 58 percent of religious bias crimes in 2017 had an anti-Semitic motivation, roughly the same share as in 2018.
In 2016, 834 offenses were classified as anti-Jewish and constituted about 54 percent of all religious bias offenses included in the FBI’s UCR statistics.
“It is unacceptable that Jews and Jewish institutions continue to be at the center of religion-based hate crime attacks,” Anti-Defamation League CEO Jonathan Greenblatt said in a press release. “We need to take concrete action to address and combat this significant problem.”
In New York, two recent anti-Semitic crimes have generated fresh outrage. The New York Police Department’s Hate Crimes Task Force says it is investigating a picture circulating on social media that depicts a subway stop defaced with swastikas and pro-Hitler graffiti. In another incident that was apparently anti-Semitic, a security camera captured footage of a man attempting to shatter the windows at a Jewish girls’ school in Crown Heights, Brooklyn.
This from today’s Jewish Press on Trump’s order to stop antisemitic hate on college campuses.