Monthly Archives: May 2017

West Virginia Supreme Court rules anti-gay assaults are not hate crimes

by Courtney Connley May 11, 2017   In a 3-2 decision Tuesday, the West Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals ruled that anti-gay assaults are not protected under the state's hate crime law, according to court documents obtained by ABC News. The decision emerged from the West Virginia v. Steward Butler case, which involves an April

1st Man Prosecuted For Federal Hate Crime Targeting Transgender Victim Gets 49 Years

by Colin Dwyer May 16, 2017   A federal court in Mississippi handed down a 49-year prison sentence on Monday to Joshua Brandon Vallum, the first person prosecuted under the Hate Crimes Prevention Act for targeting a victim because of gender identity. Vallum had pleaded guilty last year to the 2015 assault and murder of

Chazy teens charged with hate crimes

May 22, 2017   Four teenagers in the town of Chazy in Clinton County have been charged with hate crimes after they drew a swastika and wrote other anti-Semitic and racist "statements" on a building at the West Chazy Recreation Park. State police say the boys used permanent marker to scrawl the grafitti. The incident

Officials Decline to Call Fatal Stabbing of Black Student a Hate Crime

by Matt Stevens May 22, 2017   The police found the white man, a student at the University of Maryland, at around 3:30 a.m. Saturday, sitting on a campus bench a few feet away from the spot where witnesses said he had plunged his knife into a black man’s chest. The victim was pronounced dead

2 Texas men get 3 years in prison for beating Sikh man and cutting off his hair

by Veronica Rocha May 18, 2017   Two Texas men were sentenced Thursday to three years in prison for severely beating a Sikh man in Richmond, Calif., and cutting off some of his hair last year, officials said. Chase Little, 31, of Beaumont, and Colton Leblanc, 25, of Winnie, pleaded no contest to felony assault

Hate crimes in Los Angeles rose in 2016, many against LGBTQ people, study finds

by Richard Winton April 5, 2017   Reported hate crimes in Los Angeles increased 15% in 2016, with a marked rise in violence against LGBTQ individuals, according to a new analysis. Los Angeles police data show the number of reported hate crimes rose from 200 in 2015 to 230 in 2016, the highest number of

Dutch Men Hold Hands in Solidarity With Attacked Gay Couple

by Dan Bilefsky April 6, 2017   From Amsterdam to New York, London to Havana, Dutch men across the world held hands this week to show solidarity with a gay couple who say they were brutally beaten in Arnhem, the Netherlands. The outpouring of support came after the married couple, Jasper Vernes-Sewratan and Ronnie Sewratan-Vernes,

Domestic terrorism bill passes Senate, heads to governor’s desk

by Michelle Baruchman March 30, 2017   The Georgia Senate agreed with a House amendment Thursday that would give judicial discretion in domestic terrorism cases. House Bill 452, which requires the Georgia Bureau of Investigation to publicly post information about unauthorized immigrants who commit certain crimes, was a compromise between leadership in both chambers for increase public

Russia’s domestic terrorism threat is serious, sophisticated, and complex

by Mark Youngman and Cerwyn Moore April 6, 2017   The April 3 bombing on the St Petersburg metro was the highest-profile terror attack on Russian soil since a suicide bombing at Moscow’s Domodedovo airport in January 2011. According to Russia’s National Antiterrorism Committee, at least 14 people were killed and 49 injured by an

Charleston church shooter Dylann Roof pleads guilty to state charges

by Associated Press April 10, 2017   Convicted Charleston church shooter Dylann Roof pleaded guilty to state murder charges Monday, leaving him to await execution in a federal prison and sparing his victims and their families the burden of a second trial. Standing at the defense table with his attorneys, clad in a gray and