Police downplay a rise in area hate crimes
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Marisa O’Neil
The number of hate crimes in Newport Beach and Costa Mesa increased
slightly in 2003, while numbers dipped statewide, according to an FBI
report released Monday.
Costa Mesa reported a total of three hate crimes -- one racially
motivated, one ethnically motivated and one motivated by religion --
up from only one in 2002. Newport Beach reported seven -- four
racial, two ethnic and one involving religion -- up from four in
2002.
Though both cities showed increases, hate crimes still represent a
small portion of incidents, police said.
“The majority are property crimes,” Newport Beach Lt. John Klein
said.
“The worse ones are some altercations, but it’s hard to tell
whether the altercation is the result of the prejudice or the
prejudice is a result of the altercation.”
In three 2003 Newport Beach cases, people made derogatory comments
in connection with a physical altercation, Klein said. One was
racially motivated and another involved comments about religion.
A third verbal fight, which escalated into a brawl, was considered
ethnically motivated because it involved two groups of people from
the same country but different ethnic groups, Klein said.
Three others involved graffiti, and another was a verbal threat,
Klein said.
“These are all individual acts,” he said. “It doesn’t show a
pattern of increased hate crimes.”
Costa Mesa’s three incidents in 2003 all involved spray-painted
graffiti, Costa Mesa Police Sgt. Marty Carver said.
Costa Mesa Police reported 12 possible hate crimes to the Orange
County Human Relations Commission, which tracks such data, Carver
said. Of those, only the three met reporting criteria and were passed
along to the FBI.
Neither city reported any hate crimes connected to disabilities or
sexual orientation.
The FBI report released Monday is part of its Uniform Crime
Reporting program and has tracked hate crimes since 1995.
A total of 727 police agencies in California participated in the
program in 2003. Of those, 235 reported incidents, accounting for
1,472 statewide.
In 2002, 243 of 726 agencies reported 1,648 hate crimes.
* MARISA O’NEIL covers public safety and courts. She may be
reached at (714) 966-4618 or at [email protected].
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