Have You Been a Victim of a Hate Crime?
There are some reports indicating that hate could be on the rise. One from 2015 noted that crimes targeting Asian-Americans tripled in a Los Angeles county between 2014 and 2015. Last November, a woman in Seattle followed and cursed at a Latinx woman. She was later charged for malicious harassment, a hate crime in Washington State. A wave of bomb threats and vandalism struck Jewish community centers and cemeteries across the U.S. at the beginning of this year. And at least seven transgender people have been reported killed so far in 2017.
Though the law requires the FBI to track such crimes, national data is woefully lacking (states and local law enforcement simply don’t consistently report). So while the FBI counts yearly hate crimes as anywhere between 5,000 to 10,000, the Bureau of Justice Statistics estimates incidents could number into the hundreds of thousands.
To better capture and report on hate crime incidents in the U.S. will take a grassroots, collective effort. That’s why Splinter and Fusion are partnering with ProPublica, a nonprofit investigative newsroom, on its Documenting Hate project. If you’ve been attacked for your race, ethnicity, national origin, religion, gender, sexual orientation, or disability, we want to hear from you. By filling out the form here (a Spanish version is below), you’re sharing your story with a coalition of organizations to help us produce and report pieces like this. We may share this information with other partner newsrooms around the country and with some civil rights organizations working on this project.
We will not share your name and contact information with anybody outside our coalition without your permission. We are not law enforcement and will not report this information to the police. The Southern Poverty Law Center recommends you do so directly if you are a victim of a crime.