Thanks Wayne for posting this article & video. I saw it on the ABC News the day that it was reported (unbelievable when it's in your own City). It really saddened and sickened me to hear of this happening. My heart goes out to the family. When I moved into my new home in Compton almost 8 years ago their were no blacks living around me on my small street; so I know the feeling of living somewhere where you are in the minority (but after new Townhomes were built closeby, now there are many blacks closeby). Ive also experienced many Police at my door looking through my house to see if a bullet had hit my home after they were chasing a hispanic young man who had stolen something or had hurt someone. They were annoyingly searching through every inch of my home for over 6 hours that Friday night and sure enough (bingo) unbeknownst to me there was a hole in my closet rear wall & their was a hole behind my bookshelf in my Den. Praise God that the 2 bullets that came through my house did not hit me or my son (because we had no idea that our house had even been hit. Come to find out that the Police are the ones who shot into my home twice trying to shoot the guy/suspect that they were running after (so the Police Dept. paid for my home to be repaired) and they also caught the suspect and had him in the Police car taking him to jail. Classmates: You have to stay prayed up all of the time. Trouble is everywhere and at a moments notice things can change for any of us. BUT GOD IS STILL ON THE THRONE & GOD IS GOOD ALL THE TIME!!
But hate crimes happen all over L.A. County. Last year I saw on the news that a Black Single Mother & her kids were run out of their new home in Murrieta by a white hate group.
Every few years a Hate Crime Report for L.A. County comes out and this is one (below) that I found from 2008.
Take Good Care Everyone & God Bless!!
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HATE CRIMES SOAR IN LOS ANGELES COUNTY
LOS ANGELES — Hate crimes in Los Angeles County soared last year to their highest mark in five years even as overall crime dropped across the region, according to a report released Thursday.
The annual report by the county's human relations commission shows 763 hate crimes were reported in 2007, a 28 percent increase from 2006.
The numbers buck last year's overall crime trends, which saw a decrease of 6 percent in Los Angeles County and 5 percent in the city of Los Angeles, the report notes.
The most common hate crimes were those motivated by race, with 310 committed against black people and 125 against Latinos. However, crimes in which anti-immigrant slurs were used dropped slightly.
A majority of the hate crimes involved vandalism and simple assault, but aggravated assault was involved in 187 of them, a nearly 90 percent increase over the year before.
Civil rights attorney Connie Rice, who had not seen the report, said it is important to remember that hate crimes represent only a tiny percentage of overall crime numbers. She said the increase is likely a reflection of economic times.
"When economic times gets tighter, hate-crime violence goes up," she said, adding that child abuse and domestic violence often increase for the same reason.
Gangs are a factor in many hate crimes. In all, 16 percent of hate crimes last year were committed by gang members. According to the report, gang members committed 120 hate crimes last year, an increase of 14 percent from 2006.
The extent to which race is driving the area's gang crisis is a subject of ongoing debate. Sheriff Lee Baca has said he considers it a major factor, while Los Angeles police Chief William Bratton and other officials downplay suggestions of racial tension.
The report states that white supremacist activity continues to be "surprisingly high," with 131 hate crimes showing evidence of being committed by white racists.
The report notes that friction between black and Latino residents continues to be a major instigator of hate crimes. There were 116 hate crimes unrelated to gangs that were committed by Latinos against blacks and 26 such crimes committed by blacks against Latinos.
The commission said 111 hate crimes based on sexual orientation were reported, a 9 percent increase from 2006; more than 90 percent were against gay men. The report said another 105 hate crimes were based on religion — a 17 percent increase — and nearly three-quarters of them were anti-Jewish.
Information in the report is complied from law enforcement agencies, schools and universities, community organizations and directly from victims. The commission then decides which incidents fit the legal definition of hate crimes, so numbers in the report do not necessarily reflect the outcome of criminal investigations.
According to the U.S. Justice Department, for every hate crime that is reported to police, as many as 28 are not reported, often for fear of retaliation or concerns about talking to authorities.
The Los Angeles County Commission on Human Relations has compiled an annual hate crimes report since 1980.
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