Hate or bias-motivated crimes are crimes committed because the victim is (or is thought to be) a member of a certain group, such as a racial or religious minority. Nearly all states and the District of Columbia have enacted laws against hate crimes. In addition to state laws, several federal laws prohibit hate or bias crimes, including the Matthew Shepard and James Byrd, Jr., Hate Crimes Prevention Act of 2009, which offers greater protection to victims than some state laws.
Help for Victims of Hate CrimesIf you've been a victim of a hate crime, contact your local police or a local FBI field office to report the crime. You can also check out the UCLA Law Library's 50-state list of hate crime statutes for state reporting contact information. Other victim resources can be found on the websites of the Anti-Violence Project and the Human Rights Campaign.
The Southern Poverty Law Center and the Anti-Defamation League track hate and extremist groups, and their websites have information and statistics on hate crimes.
The definition of hate and bias crime laws varies from state to state. But, in general, it is a crime committed against an individual because of the victim's actual or perceived:
Some hate crime legislation also protects people based on homelessness, gender identity or expression, or political affiliation.
Protected characteristics. States vary widely as to the classifications protected under their state laws. Most states' laws prohibit crimes based on an individual's race, color, ethnicity, religion, gender, and disability. Increasingly, state laws provide protections based on sexual orientation, gender identity, and gender expression.
Perceived characteristics. Hate or bias crime laws protect victims based on their actual or perceived characteristics—whether or not the perception (belief) is correct. For example, a person who attacks someone on the mistaken belief the individual is Muslim or Arab commits a hate crime, even if it turns out the individual isn't Muslim or Arab.
The Public Policy Behind Hate Crime LegislationHate crime legislation seeks to eliminate and penalize violence motivated by bias and hate in an effort to protect not only individual victims but also to protect society as a whole. Opponents of hate crime legislation argue these laws merely cater to special interest groups, and no good public policy reason exists to distinguish between crimes motivated by bias and crimes committed for other reasons. Proponents of hate crime laws assert that victims targeted due to bias suffer greater psychological harm than others. They also argue racial, ethnic, and religious minorities and gay people are more likely to be targeted for—and therefore need greater protection from—violent crime.
State laws differ in the types of classes protected by hate crime laws (race, religion, sexual orientation). But within the classes protected by the law, anyone who is targeted for a crime motivated by hate or bias is protected, not just people who are members of a minority group. Because everyone has a race, national origin, and so on, everyone is protected under hate crime laws when they are victimized because of these protected characteristics. For more information, see Is Everyone Protected by Hate Crime Laws?
There are generally three types of laws criminalizing hate crimes.
These are laws prohibiting institutional vandalism or destruction. For example, a law might make it a crime to damage or deface a church, synagogue, mosque, or other place of religious worship.
These substantive offenses make it an independent crime to threaten or use violence against people because of their membership in a protected class. In California, for example, it is a crime to injure, intimidate, or threaten a person due to the person's gender, race, nationality, sexual orientation, disability, or religion.
Many states have hate crime enhancement laws. These laws increase the penalties for the underlying offense based on the defendant's motivation for committing the crime. For example, a misdemeanor assault could become a felony assault based on the crime being racially motivated. Or a state law might impose a minimum sentence for a hate crime or tack on an additional amount of incarceration time for the underlying offense. Some state laws allow penalty enhancements for any crime, while others limit the protections to only crimes of violence or specific crimes (like arson, assault, or harassment).
Not every crime committed against a person in a protected class is a hate crime. It becomes so only if the defendant committed the crime because of the victim's actual or perceived status in a protected class. For example, suppose that two teens deface a store owned by a Muslim. If there is no evidence that the victim's religion had anything to do with the crime, it would not be prosecuted as a hate crime. However, if the teens intentionally sought out the store for vandalism because it was owned by a Muslim, the prosecutor may charge it as a hate crime.
In order to convict a defendant of a hate crime, the prosecutor must prove beyond a reasonable doubt to the jury that the defendant committed the crime because of the victim's race, color, religion, or for some other prohibited reason. Proving that the defendant acted with hate crime intent can be difficult. Relevant evidence might include:
In practice, prosecutors generally seek hate crime convictions only when fairly obvious evidence of bias exists on the part of the defendant. For instance, in the vandalism example above, the defendant's spray-painted hateful slogans regarding the shopkeeper's religion would be powerful evidence that these feelings motivated the crime.
Most state laws carry criminal penalties for hate crimes. But, in some states, both criminal penalties and civil remedies exist.
Criminal penalties for hate crimes vary from state to state but many hate crimes are felonies (crimes punishable by more than one year in prison). States that allow penalty enhancements might increase the penalty by a certain number of years or raise the offense level—say from a misdemeanor to a felony or from a second-degree to a first-degree felony.
Under federal hate crime legislation, bias-motivated violence is punishable by 10 years to life in prison, and some bias-motivated crimes are punishable by the death penalty. (18 U.S.C. §§ 245, 249 (2023).)
In many states, people who commit violence, intimidation, or vandalism against others on account of the person's race, religion, ethnicity, or membership in a protected group can be sued in civil court and ordered to pay damages (money) to the victim. Just as criminal hate crime laws vary from state to state, so do civil liability laws.
The First Amendment guarantees the right to free speech. Although defendants have challenged hate crime legislation on the ground that these laws violate their rights to free speech, those challenges have generally not been successful so long as the law criminalizes bias-motivated conduct and not merely hateful thoughts or speech. (Wisconsin v. Mitchell, 508 U.S. 476 (1993).) In order to withstand First Amendment challenges, hate crimes legislation must be carefully drafted to avoid criminalizing thoughts or speech, even when that speech is offensive and hateful.
If you are charged with a crime, contact a local criminal defense attorney. An attorney can help you navigate the criminal justice system, defend your case, and protect your rights. Local criminal defense attorneys are often familiar with the local judges and prosecutors and know how similar cases have fared in the system.