We don’t need the statistics to tell us what is happening in the United States. Anecdotal evidence and reports from law enforcement make it clear that there has been a rise in crimes fueled by anti-religious or anti-gay or racist bigotry.
Nor do we have any reason to smugly believe that such crimes are primarily the purview of states far from the utopia that is Washington. According to new data from the FBI, Washington ranked second behind California in the number of hate crimes in 2017, with law enforcement agencies in this state reporting 613 hate-motivated incidents. National numbers released this week showed a 17 percent increase in hate crimes over the previous year, including a 37 percent jump in reported anti-Semitic offenses.
There are a couple caveats that must be considered. One is that the jump is due, in part, to improved reporting of such crimes; the FBI says that an additional 1,000 law enforcement agencies provided reports this year. Another is that experts say incidents of hate crimes are grossly underreported to begin with, throwing all the data into question.
But while we can question the raw numbers, we also can confirm that there is tension and anger throughout the country that is increasingly being manifested in criminal acts. It is an anger that led Clark County Sheriff Chuck Atkins and Prosecuting Attorney Tony Golik to issue a joint statement earlier this year warning about what they see in this community and beyond. “We reject hate, bigotry, harassment, violence or the inciting of violence, and all actions intended to harm or intimidate others based on race, ethnicity, religion, sexual orientation, gender identity, immigration status, or any other attribute which serves to marginalize people or groups of people,” the statement read, in part.