According to FBI data released yesterday, Florida cops reported 96 hate incidents last year. That's up from 72 in 2015 — a 33 percent jump. (And up from 65 incidents in 2014 and 76 in 2013.) Last year represented the largest number of hate crimes reported since
County-specific info is a bit muddy in the FBI's databases, but within Miami-Dade County, Miami Beach Police reported a whopping 12 anti-LGBTQ crimes, which made up more than a third of the state's anti-gay attacks. There were also four reported "anti-religion" crimes in Miami Beach, two in North Miami, and one reported by Miami-Dade County Police.
Thankfully, race-based attacks seem to still be down from their historic peaks. Within the past decade, hate crimes hit an apex in 2012, and more than 50 percent (77 of 144 reported crimes) of those hate incidents were listed as race-based attacks or harassment incidents.
(Oddly, the number of police departments participating in the FBI's Uniform-Crime-Reporting program dropped precipitously after 2014 — that year, 505 different agencies covering 19 million people participated in the Bureau's hate-crime monitoring program. In 2016, just 46 departments covering just 8 million residents took part.)
The FBI's data meshes with what Floridians told New Times most of
Nationally, the FBI tallied more than 6,100 hate crimes last year, up from 5,800 in 2015. The number of crimes against Jewish and Muslim citizens increased last year (just as Jewish and Muslim civil rights organizations warned would happen). Roughly half of all perpetrators were white people.
In a June investigation, New Times partnered with the investigative-reporting nonprofit ProPublica to take its own tally of hate crimes across the Sunshine State. ProPublica received 169 hate-crime reports from Florida residents —
Separate data released this year also showed that far-right, neo-Nazi, and neo-Confederate groups have been unafraid to show their faces in public lately. According to a tally from the Anti-Defamation League, Floridians made up a huge percentage of the racist demonstrators at the Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, where a neo-Nazi drove a car into a crowd of anti-racist protesters and killed a progressive activist.
One of the Charlottesville attendees from Miami, Christopher Rey Monzon, was later arrested in Hollywood, Florida, for charging at a crowd of civil rights protesters and using a flagpole to try to stab and/or beat them. Seconds before the attack, Monzon was caught on film hurling insults at Jews.