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Why are the FBI's Numbers Wrong? How
You Can Help |
But today, Sasezley Richardson isnt even a statistic. If you pick up a copy of the FBIs "Hate Crime Statistics: 1999" report, you wont find anything representing the death of this young man, shot dead on Nov. 17, 1999. And Richardson wasn't the only forgotten victim. Although official numbers consistently have documented fewer than 10,000 hate crimes a year, a 2005 report from the Bureau of Justice Statistics suggests the true number is likely closer to 191,000. According to the Southern Poverty Law Center's Intelligence Project, this means the real level of hate crimes runs between 19 and 31 times what has been officially reported for the past 15 years. Backing this up, an investigation by the Southern Poverty Law Center's Intelligence Report, performed 10 years after the FBI began compiling hate crime statistics, found a system riddled with errors, omissions and even outright falsification of data. It will take all of us to help fix the system. Join the Every Victim Counts campaign in advocating for:
Accurate collection of hate crime data will equip communities with the information necessary to shape effective strategies to deal with and prevent hate crimes like the murder of Sasezley Richardson. Do
your part.
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