Indicator: 66 - Hate Crimes

Why This Is Important
Maine is seeing growth of a more and more diverse population that
can benefit all local communities. Incidents of hate crimes, and
other violations related to bias and/or prejudice, harm a community's
ability to meet the needs of all children and families in all of
their diversity. When people feel threatened, when property is damaged
and when people are attacked or killed because of hate, bias or
prejudice, the whole community is called upon to act.

Where We Stand
"Hate crimes" are criminal incidents motivated by bias
against persons because of their perceived race, religion, mental
or physical disability, sexual orientation or ethnicity/national
origin. In Maine, they may include murder, rape, robbery, aggravated
assault, burglary, larceny-theft, motor vehicle theft, arson, simple
assault, intimidation, vandalism and harassment. Any particular
hate crime incident may involve one or more offenders and one or
more victims.
Local law enforcement agencies in Maine reported that the number
of hate crime incidents dropped between 1995 and 1999, before rising
slightly in 2000. These data may under-report the number of such
crimes, since not all victims are willing to report incidents to
police.
A second source of information relevant to hate crimes is the Office
of the Maine Attorney General, which can seek restraining orders
against persons who commit violence, threat of violence, or property
damage motivated by the minority status of the victim. The Office
receives about 225 reports of civil rights violations and bias incidents
each year.
Data Sources and Context
Hate crime data is generated by local law enforcement agencies
as part of the National Uniform Crime Reporting (UCR) Program. This
program is administered by the State Police in Maine, and all crime
data from the UCR is published annually in Crime in Maine. That
data is available on-line at http://www.state.me.us/dps/cim/crime_in_maine/cim.htm.
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