Photo: Barack Obama. Credit: Pete Souza/White House.
President Barack Obama marked the fifth anniversary of the Matthew Shepard and James Byrd Jr. Hate Crime Prevention Act in a statement released Thursday.
“Since this law was passed, the FBI and Department of Justice have vigorously investigated and prosecuted dozens of hate crime cases nationwide, including attacks on minorities, gays and lesbians, and people with disabilities,” said Obama, who signed the bill into law on Oct. 28, 2009. “The number of individuals charged with hate crimes has increased significantly over the past five years. And state and local law enforcement officers and other community members have received training in how to recognize and address hate crimes. The law is working.”
The law enables the Department of Justice to prosecute crimes motivated by race, color, religion and national origin without having to show that the defendant was engaged in a federally protected activity. It also empowers the Justice Department to prosecute crimes committed because of a person’s sexual orientation, gender identity, gender or disability as hate crimes.
According to a White House official, the White House hosted an event Thursday marking the 5th anniversary of the bill. The White House and Justice Department announced at the meeting an initiative coordinated by the White House Domestic Policy Council that will consist of quarterly meetings focusing on prevention of violent hate crimes and effective responses to such hate crimes. The initiative will include the Justice Department, FBI, Department of Education, Department of Homeland Security, State Department and Department of Health and Human Services.
Administration officials also announced at the event efforts to expand the use of incident based crime data, further training for state and local law enforcement and community leaders on hate crimes, a new series of Community Relations Service hate crimes forums and an anticipated memo from Attorney General Eric Holder to U.S. Attorneys offices across the country on combating hate crimes.
The event was attended by a number of administration officials, including Director of the White House Domestic Policy Council, Cecilia Munoz, Senior Advisor to the president, Valerie Jarrett, acting Assistant Attorney General for Civil Rights, Vanita Gupta, FBI Director James Comey, Labor Secretary Thomas Perez. Judy and Dennis Shepard also attended.
In the past five fiscal years from 2009 to 2014, the Justice Department has charged 174 defendants on federal hate crimes or hate crimes-related charges — an increase of 23 percent from the prior five fiscal years, according to a White House official.
“Our job isn’t done,” Obama continued. “We must continue to stand together against intolerance and hate wherever they occur, and respond decisively when they lead to violence. Ours is a country built on the notion that all people are created equal. It’s up to us to make that ideal real, in our words and deeds as well as in our laws – to ensure that, in America, everyone is treated with the respect and dignity they deserve, no matter who they are or who they love.”
Two 20-year-old men have been accused of plotting a deadly terrorist attack in suburban Detroit, allegedly targeting several LGBTQ bars after purchasing high-powered weapons, stockpiling ammunition, and practicing at local gun ranges.
According to an FBI affidavit, Mohmed Ali and Majed Mahmoud, both 20 and from Dearborn, allegedly conspired with at least five unnamed individuals and a minor -- identified as "Person 1" -- to carry out an ISIS-inspired shooting attack on Halloween night. Prosecutors say Ali and Person 1 were to execute the assault while the others planned to travel to Syria to join Islamic State forces.
In a letter to House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.), 213 Democratic U.S. representatives, as well as Delegates Stacey Plaskett (Virgin Islands), Eleanor Holmes Norton (D.C.), and Resident Commissioner Pablo José Hernández (Puerto Rico), are demanding that Johnson rebuke Republican lawmakers for using "demonizing and dehumanizing" language when speaking about the transgender community.
"We write to you to strongly condemn the rise in anti-transgender rhetoric, including from members of Congress, and to urge you to ensure members of Congress are following rules of decorum and not using their platforms to demonize and scapegoat any marginalized community, including the transgender community," the Democrats' letter reads.
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