43 homicides found tracking homeless hate crimes
Published 12:09 am Tuesday, August 31, 2010
CASSOPOLIS — “Hate Crimes Against the Homeless: America’s Growing Tide of Violence” is a shocking report on the growth of biased motivated crimes of hate against America’s homeless.
The National Coalition for the Homeless’ report marks the beginning of its second decade tracking, interviewing and classifying thousands of individuals impacted by homeless hate crimes.
This year’s report has the horrifying distinction of being the deadliest, at 43 reported homicides.
The research contained in this report chronicles more than a thousand separate attacks across the US, representing a fraction of the total hate crimes that remain drastically under-reported.
Individuals who commit homeless hate crimes are motivated primarily by a bias that another individual is or may be homeless.
Perpetrators often give account to feelings of hostility and animosity towards the visibly homeless, so strong they demand action.
While others describe a generalized hatred, passed down from one generation to the next, resulting in a growing epidemic of violence across America.
Documented hate crimes in this report involve: dousing with gasoline and setting aflame; rape in exchange for shelter; spray painting and stomping upon while sleeping; and, repeated incidence of gang initiations involving stabbings and beatings.
“On behalf of any and every victim of biased motivated crime, we must remain committed to the cause of justice, honest stewards of truth and capable recorders of the endless narrative of hate,” said Neil Donovan, NCH executive director.
Un-housed individuals, as a target of hate, have consistently grown over the past decade.
This year’s report draws an especially gruesome and disturbing trend in the frequency and manner of the offenses.
Violent, often fatal, attacks on homeless Americans now outnumber all other categories of hate crimes combined.
The National Coalition for the Homeless has successfully advanced its legislative agenda on hate crimes, both at the state and federal levels.
Their objective is to place the responsibility of tracking statistics on hate crimes against the homeless into the hands of local and national law enforcement. Their goal is to further legitimize their analysis and to quantify the growing epidemic of violence against the homeless, ultimately resulting in sufficient resources to solve the problem and create solutions.