Asians Rarely, Though Increasingly Face Hate Crimes

Petr Svab
By Petr Svab
March 21, 2021US News
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Asians Rarely, Though Increasingly Face Hate Crimes
San Francisco police officers Loren Chu (L) and William Ma (R) walk down Grant Avenue while on a foot patrol in Chinatown in San Francisco, Calif. on March 18, 2021. (Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)

Americans have been targeted for their Asian ancestry more often in recent years but the incidents remain rare.

There were 158 anti-Asian hate crimes reported in 2019 by police agencies to the FBI, up from 148 the year before.

The FBI won’t release its 2020 data until the fall but in 16 of the country’s largest cities, according to an analysis by researchers from California State University (CSU) in San Bernardino (pdf), there was an increase to 122 incidents in 2020 from 49 the year before.

The data has come to the forefront of media attention after a 21-year-old man killed eight people in several massage parlors in the Atlanta area on March 16. Six of the victims were Asian women. Many such parlors are known to illegally offer sexual services and are most commonly staffed by Chinese immigrants, many of whom have fallen victim to human trafficking rings. Authorities said the killer used to frequent some of the establishments and may have been addicted to sex. He told police he was trying to eliminate the temptation.

While the investigation hasn’t so far uncovered an anti-Asian motive on the man’s part, the establishment media has run with the narrative, connecting the attacks with anti-Chinese sentiment related to the COVID-19 pandemic. The disease is caused by a coronavirus that emerged under opaque conditions in Wuhan, China, in 2019. Its spread around the world was abetted by a coverup by China’s ruling Chinese Communist Party (CCP).

While the CSU analysis indicates that there has been an increase in anti-Asian hate, it’s difficult to determine if this trend was seen country-wide, as police departments commonly don’t make the data readily available. The analysis doesn’t provide specific sources.

The Epoch Times attempted to verify the data for New York City and found only one incident of anti-Asian crime reported in 2019 and 27 in 2020, while CSU cited three incidents in 2019 and 28 in 2020. The university’s Center for the Study of Hate and Extremism, which authored the analysis, didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.

Based on 2019 FBI data, anti-Asian sentiments motivated about 2.2 percent of hate crimes reported. Since Asians make up about 6 percent of the population, it appears they are less likely than other races to experience hate crime—with the exception of whites.

About 45 percent of hate crimes aren’t reported to police, according to 2015 survey data by the Bureau of Justice Statistics (pdf).

Hate crimes are regular crimes where the authorities seek a higher penalty, alleging that the perpetrator was motivated by animus toward characteristics such as race, religion, and sexual proclivities. Hate crime charges can be tricky to bring forth since they depend on determining the perpetrator’s state of mind. The most common type—nearly 30 percent—is vandalism or property damage.

A significant minority of hate crimes may be hoaxes, according to a 2017 analysis by Wilfred Reilly, assistant professor at Kentucky State University.

From The Epoch Times

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