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Hate Crimes Against LGBT People Are Sadly Common

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Filed: IR-1/CR-1 Visa Country: Canada
Timeline

By Ella Koeze

Filed under Hate Crimes

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A vigil for victims of the Pulse nightclub shooting on Sunday at The Center, a community center for the LGBT community in Las Vegas.

JOHN LOCHER / AP

The massacre at a gay nightclub in Orlando on Sunday was the worst mass shooting in American history and the deadliest terrorist attack on U.S. soil since Sept. 11. Through another lens, however, it was not an outlier. The gunman’s choice of target, a gay club, makes him just one of many to commit hate crimes against gay Americans. Although the magnitude and violence of the attack was unusual, the targeting of LGBT Americans is sadly common.

BIAS AGAINST … NO. OF INCIDENTS Race Overall 2,568 Blacks or African-Americans 1,621 Whites 593 Asians 140 American Indians or Alaska Natives 130 Multiple races, group 81 Native Hawaiians or other Pacific Islander 3 Sexual orientation and gender identity Overall 1,115 Gay men 599 Lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgender persons, group 241 Lesbians 129 Transgender persons 58 Gender non-conforming persons 40 Bisexuals 30 Heterosexuals 18 Religion Overall 1,014 Jewish people 609 Muslims 154 Other religions 107 Catholics 64 Multiple religions, group 44 Protestants 25 Atheists/agnostics/etc. 11 Ethnicity, disability and gender 765 Total 5,462 ‘Single-bias’ hate crime incidents by motivation, 2014

SOURCE: FBI

Of 5,462 “single-bias incidents” (hate-crime incidents with one motivation) in the FBI’s 2014 hate crime statistics database, 1,115, about a fifth, were motivated by bias against a sexual orientation or gender identity.1 (This count is almost certainly much lower than the actual number of hate crimes. Data on hate crimes is notoriously difficult to collect, as it relies heavily on self-reporting and many hate crimes are never categorized as such.) Of those incidents, 54 percent targeted gay men specifically. Only two groups were the targets of more hate crimes than gay men: black and Jewish people. (Obviously, all these groups aren’t mutually exclusive.)

Taking into account the relatively small size of the LGBT population, these numbers are even starker. According to an analysis by the Southern Poverty Law Center using FBI hate crime data and population estimates, LGBT Americans are targeted in hate crimes at 8.3 times the rate you’d expect based on the size of their population; that’s higher than the rate for both Jews (at 3.5) and black people (at 3.2).

The Orlando attack was a little more unusual in its choice of location. Nightclubs are relatively rare as locations for hate crimes against LGBT people.

LOCATION SHARE Residence/home 32.2%
Highway/road/alley/street/sidewalk 23.0
School/university 7.6
Parking/drop lot/garage 5.8
Restaurant 2.2
Bar/nightclub 2.1
Park/playground 1.6
Air/bus/train terminal 1.3
Jail/prison/penitentiary/corrections facility 1.3
Government/public building 1.2
Other 21.7
Hate crimes based on sexual orientation and gender identity by location, 2014

Of 1,115 hate crimes classified by location

SOURCE: FBI

However, the shooter’s choice of location may have been all the more insidious for that. A gay-friendly bar or club is supposed to be a safe place. Even before Sunday’s shooting, nightclubs were slightly more dangerous for LGBT people than for other groups; only 1.6 percent of all hate crimes in 2014 occurred in bars and nightclubs, compared with the 2.1 percent of those that targeted people for their sexual orientation and gender identity.

The motivations of the killer may become clearer as investigators learn more. Nevertheless, in his choice to target gay people, he wasn’t alone.

Footnotes
  1. Eighteen of those incidents were targeting heterosexuals. ^

The content available on a site dedicated to bringing folks to America should not be promoting racial discord, euro-supremacy, discrimination based on religion , exclusion of groups from immigration based on where they were born, disenfranchisement of voters rights based on how they might vote.

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