ACLU Statement on Hate Crimes Legislation Before the Crime Subcommittee of the House Committee on the Judiciary (4/17/2007)
American Civil Liberties
Union Statement on Hate Crimes
Legislation
Before the Crime
Subcommittee of the House Committee on the
Judiciary
Submitted by Christopher E.
Anders, Legislative Counsel April 17, 2007
I.
Introduction
The
American Civil Liberties Union respectfully submits this statement to strongly
urge the Subcommittee on Crime--and the full House of Representatives--to pass
the Local Law Enforcement Hate Crimes Prevention Act.
We
are pleased that the sponsors of the legislation are once again including in the
legislation an important provision that ensures that the bill will not chill
constitutionally protected speech.
Specifically, the bill will include a specific provision excluding
evidence of speech that is unrelated to the crime. As a result, the ACLU is strongly urging
support for this bill expanding the federal criminal civil rights
statutes.
The
ACLU believes that the Congress can and should expand federal jurisdiction to
prosecute criminal civil rights violations when state and local governments are
unwilling or unable to prosecute.
At the same time, we also believe that these prosecutions should not
include evidence of mere abstract beliefs or mere membership in an organization
from becoming a basis for such prosecutions. The hate crimes bill accomplishes these
goals by providing a stronger federal response to criminal civil rights
violations, but tempering it with clear protections for free speech.
II. The Persistent Problem of
Criminal Civil Rights Violations
The
ACLU supports providing remedies against invidious discrimination and urges that
discrimination by private persons be made illegal when it excludes persons from
access to fundamental rights or from the opportunity to participate in the
political or social life of the community.
The serious problem of crime directed at members of society because of
their race, color, religion, gender, national origin, sexual orientation, gender
identity, or disability merits legislative action. Such action is particularly timely as a response to the rising tide of
violence directed at people because of such characteristics. Those crimes convey a constitutionally
unprotected threat against the peaceable enjoyment of public places to members
of the targeted group.
Pursuant to the Hate Crime Statistics Act, the Federal Bureau of
Investigation annually collects and reports statistics on the number of
bias-related criminal incidents reported by local and state law enforcement
officials. For 2003, based on
reports from state and local law enforcement agencies, the FBI reported 7,489
incidents covered by the Act. 3,844
of those incidents were related to race, 1,343 to religion, 1,239 to sexual
orientation, 1,026 to ethnicity or national origin, 33 to disability, and four
to multiple categories.
Existing federal law does not provide any separate offense for violent
acts based on race, color, national origin, or religion, unless the defendant
intended to interfere with the victim’s participation in certain enumerated
activities. 18 U.S.C.A. §
245(b)(2). During hearings in the
Senate and House of Representatives, advocates for racial, ethnic, and religious
minorities presented substantial evidence of the problems resulting from the
inability of the federal government to prosecute crimes based on race, color,
national origin, or religion without any tie to an enumerated activity. Those cases include violent crimes based
on a protected class, which state or local officials either inadequately
investigated or declined to prosecute.
In
addition, existing federal law does not provide any separate offense whatsoever
for violent acts based on sexual orientation, gender, gender identity, or
disability. The exclusion of sexual
orientation, gender, gender identity, and disability from section 245 of the
criminal code can have bizarre results.
For example, in an appeal by a person convicted of killing an
African-American gay man, the defendant argued that “the evidence established,
if anything, that he beat [the victim] because he believed him to be a
homosexual and not because he was black.”
United States v. Bledsoe, 728 F.2d 1094, 1098 (8th Cir. 1984), cert.
denied, 469 U.S. 838 (1984). Among
the evidence that the court cited in affirming the conviction because of
violence based on race, was testimony that the defendant killed the
African-American gay victim, but allowed a white gay man to escape. Id. at 1095, 1098. Striking or killing a person solely
because of that person’s sexual orientation would not have resulted in a
conviction under that statute.
In addition to the highly publicized accounts of the deaths of Matthew
Shepard and Billy Jack Gaither, other reports of violence because of a person’s
sexual orientation or gender identity include:
- An account by the Human Rights Campaign of “[a] lesbian security guard,
22, [who] was assigned to work a holiday shift with a guard from a temporary
employment service. He
propositioned her repeatedly.
Finally, she told him she was a lesbian. Issuing anti-lesbian slurs, he raped
her.”
- A report by Mark Weinress, during an American Psychological Association
briefing on hate crimes, of his beating by two men who yelled “we kill faggots”
and “die faggots” at the victim and his partner from the defendants’ truck,
chased the victims on foot while shouting “death to faggots,” and beat the
victims with a billy club while responding “we kill faggots” when a bystander
asked what the defendants were doing.
-
A report by the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force of a letter from a person
who wrote that she “was gang-raped for being a lesbian. Four men beat me, spat on me, urinated
on me, and raped me . . . . When I reported the incident to Fresno police, they
were sympathetic until they learned I was homosexual. They closed their book, and said, ‘Well,
you were asking for it.’”
-
An article in the Washington Post about five Marines who left the Marine
Barracks on Capitol Hill to throw a tear gas canister into a nearby gay
bar. Several persons were treated
for nausea and other gas-related symptoms.
The
problem of crimes based on gender is also persistent. For example, two women cadets at the
Citadel, a military school that had only recently opened its doors to female
students, were singled out and
“hazed” by male cadets who did not believe that women had a right to be at the
school. Male cadets allegedly
sprayed the two women with nail polish remover and then set their clothes
ablaze, not once, but three times within a two month period. One male cadet also threatened one of
the two women by saying that he would cut her “heart out” if he ever saw her
alone off campus.
Federal
legislation addressing such criminal civil rights violations is necessary
because state and local law enforcement officers are sometimes unwilling or
unable to prosecute those crimes because of either inadequate resources or their
own bias against the victim. The
prospect of such failure to provide equal protection of the laws justifies
federal jurisdiction.
For
example, state and local law enforcement officials have often been hostile to
the needs of gay men and lesbians.
The fear of state and local police--which many gay men and lesbians share
with members of other minorities--is not unwarranted. For example, until recently, the
Maryland state police department refused to employ gay men or lesbians as state
police officers. In addition, only
blocks from the Capitol a few years ago, a District of Columbia police
lieutenant who headed the police unit that investigates extortion cases was
arrested by the FBI for attempting to extort $10,000 from a man seen leaving a
gay bar. Police officers referred
to the practice as “fairy shaking.”
The problem is widespread.
In fact, the National Coalition of Anti-Violence Programs reports several
hundred anti-gay incidents allegedly committed by state and local law
enforcement officers annually. The
federal government clearly has an enforcement role when state and local
governments fail to provide equal protection of the laws.
III. The New Bill Provides Strong
Protection of Free Speech
The
ACLU has a long record of support for stronger protection of both free speech
and civil rights. Those positions
are not inconsistent. In fact,
vigilant protection of free speech rights historically has opened the doors to
effective advocacy for expanded civil rights protections.
Fourteen years ago, the ACLU submitted a brief to the Supreme Court
urging the Court to uphold a Wisconsin hate crime sentencing enhancement statute
as constitutional. However, the
ACLU also asked the Court “to set forth a clear set of rules governing the use
of such statutes in the future.”
The ACLU warned the Court that “if the state is not able to prove that a
defendant’s speech is linked to specific criminal behavior, the chances increase
that the state’s hate crime prosecution is politically inspired.” The evidentiary provision in the House
bill will help avoid that harm.
The
ACLU appreciates the sponsors’ inclusion of the evidentiary provision that
prevents the hate crimes legislation from having any potentially chilling effect
on constitutionally protected speech.
The evidentiary subsection in the bill provides
that:
Evidence
of expression or association of the defendant may not be introduced as
substantive evidence at trial, unless the evidence specifically relates to that
offense. However, nothing in this
section affects the rules of evidence governing the impeachment of a
witness.
This
provision will reduce or eliminate the possibility that the federal government
could obtain a criminal conviction on the basis of evidence of speech that had
no role in the chain of events that led to any alleged violent act proscribed by
the statute.
This
provision in the House bill almost exactly copies a paragraph in the Washington
State hate crimes statute. Wash.
Rev. Code § 9A.36.080(4). This
Washington State language is not new; the paragraph was added to the Washington
State statute as part of an amendment in 1993. The ACLU has conferred with litigators
involved in hate crimes prevention in Washington State. They report no complaints that the
provision inappropriately impedes prosecutions.
On its face, the hate crimes bill punishes only the conduct of
intentionally selecting another person for violence because of that person’s
race, color, national origin, religion, gender, sexual orientation, gender
identity, or disability. The
prosecution must prove the conduct of intentional selection of the victim. Thus, the hate crimes bill, like the
present principal criminal civil rights statute, 18 U.S.C. § 245 (“section
245”), punishes discrimination (an act), not bigotry (a belief).
The federal government usually proves the intentional selection element
of section 245 prosecutions by properly introducing ample evidence related to
the chain of events. For example,
in a section 245 prosecution based on race, a federal court of appeals found
that the prosecution met its burden of proving that the defendant attacked the
victim because of his race by introducing admissions that the defendant stated
that “he had once killed a nigger queen,” that he attacked the victim “[b]ecause
he was a black fag,” and by introducing evidence that the defendant allowed a
white gay man to escape further attack, but relentlessly pursued the
African-American gay victim.
Bledsoe, 728 F.2d at 1098.
Although the Justice Department has argued that it usually avoids
attempting to introduce evidence proving nothing more than that a person holds
racist or other bigoted views, it has at least occasionally introduced such
evidence. In at least one decision,
a federal court of appeals expressly found admissible such evidence that was
wholly unrelated to the chain of events that resulted in the violent act. United States v. Dunnaway, 88 F.3d 617
(8th Cir. 1996). The court upheld
the admissibility of a tattoo of a skinhead group on the inside lip of the
defendant because “[t]he crime in this [section 245] case involved elements of
racial hatred.” Id. at 618. The tattoo was admissible even in the
absence of any evidence in the decision linking the skinhead group to the
violent act.
The decision admitting that evidence of a tattoo confirmed our concerns
expressed in the ACLU’s brief filed with the Supreme Court in support of the
Wisconsin hate crimes penalty enhancement statute. In asking for guidance from the Court on
the applicability of such statutes, the ACLU stated its concern that evidence of
speech should not be relevant unless “the government proves that [the evidence]
is directly related to the underlying crime and probative of the defendant’s
discriminatory intent.” The ACLU
brief urged that, “[a]t a minimum, any speech or association that is not
contemporaneous with the crime must be part of the chain of events that led to
the crime. Generalized evidence
concerning the defendant’s racial views is not sufficient to meet this
test.”
The evidentiary provision in the House hate crimes bill is important
because, without it, we could see more evidence of unrelated speech admitted in
hate crime prosecutions. Many of
the arguments made in favor of hate crime legislation today are very different
than the arguments made in favor of enacting section 245 37 years ago. At that time, the focus was on giving
the federal government jurisdiction to prosecute numerous murders of
African-Americans, including civil rights workers, which had gone unpunished by
state and local prosecutors. The
intent was to have a federal backstop to state and local law enforcement.
The
problem today is that there is an increasing focus on “combating hate,” fighting
“hate groups,” and identifying alleged perpetrators by their membership in such
groups--even in the absence of any link between membership in the group and the
violent act. Those arguments are
very different from the arguments made in support of section 245 when it passed
as an important part of the historic Civil Rights Act of 1968.
The evidentiary provision removes the danger that--after years of debate
focused on combating “hate”--courts, litigants, and jurors applying a federal
hate crime statute could be more likely to believe that speech-related evidence
that is unrelated to the chain of events leading to a violent act is a proper
basis for proving the intentional selection element of the offense. The provision will stop the temptation
for prosecutors to focus on proving the selection element by showing “guilt by
association” with groups whose bigoted views we may all find repugnant, but
which may have had no role in committing the violent act. We should add that evidence of
association could also just as easily focus on many groups representing the very
persons that the hate crimes bill should protect.[1] The evidentiary provision in the House
bill precludes all such evidence from being used to prove the crime, unless it
specifically related to the violent offense.
The evidentiary provision in the House hate crimes bill is not overly
expansive. The provision will bar
only evidence that had no specific relationship to the underlying violent
offense. It will have no effect on
the admissibility of evidence of speech that bears a specific relationship to
the underlying crime--or evidence used to impeach a witness. Thus, the proposal will not bar all
expressions or associations of the accused. It is a prophylactic provision that is
precisely tailored to protect against the chilling of constitutionally protected
free speech.
IV.
Conclusion
For
the foregoing reasons, the ACLU strongly urges the House to pass this properly
drafted legislation to expand federal jurisdiction to address the continuing
problem of an inadequate state and local response to criminal civil rights
violations, but without affecting any protected speech. Specifically, the ACLU urges the House
to take prompt action in passing the Local Law Enforcement Hate Crimes
Prevention Act of 2007. The ACLU
appreciates this opportunity to present our concerns.
Endnote:
[1] For example, many of the
principal First Amendment association decisions arose from challenges to
governmental investigations of civil rights and civil liberties
organizations. See,
e.g., Gibson v. Florida Legislative Investigation Committee, 372
U.S. 539 (1962) (holding that the NAACP could refuse to disclose its membership
list to a state legislature investigating alleged Communist infiltration of
civil rights groups); Bates v. City of Little Rock, 361 U.S. 516 (1960)
(reversing a conviction of NAACP officials who refused to comply with local
ordinances requiring disclosure of membership lists); NAACP v. State of
Alabama, 357 U.S. 449 (1958) (holding as unconstitutional a judgment of
contempt and fine on the NAACP for failure to produce its membership lists);
New Jersey Citizen Action v. Edison Township, 797 F.2d 1250 (3rd Cir.
1986) (refusing to require the fingerprinting of door-to-door canvassers for a
consumer rights group), cert. denied, sub nom.
Piscataway v. New Jersey Citizen Action, 479 U.S. 1103 (1987);
Familias Unidas v. Briscoe, 619 F.2d 391 (5th Cir. 1980) (refusing a
request to compel the disclosure of the membership list of a public school
reform group); Committee in Solidarity with the People of El Salvador v.
Sessions, 705 F.Supp. 25 (D.D.C. 1989) (denying a request for preliminary
injunction against FBI’s dissemination of information collected on foreign
policy group); Alliance to End Repression v. City of Chicago, 627 F.Supp.
1044 (1985) (police infiltrated and photographed activities of a civil liberties
group and an anti-war group).
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