A hate-crimes bill nine years in the making failed to get past a Utah
senate committee after nearly two hours of debate Tuesday. Senators
voted 4-3 to kill the bill, introduced by Sen. Karen Hale (D-Salt Lake
City). It would have created enhanced penalties for crimes where
victims had been selected based on the bias or prejudice of the
perpetrator. The senate judiciary, law enforcement, and criminal
justice committee heard an hour of emotional testimony from the public,
some of whom said the bill was part of a gay agenda to create special
protections in the law for gays and lesbians. Other testified they knew
of people who had been physically tortured for being Hispanic or had
themselves had racial epithets spray-painted on their homes. Police and
prosecutors, who for nine years have asked for a more effective, usable
hate-crimes statute, asked the committee members to send a message that
bias crimes will not be tolerated in Utah. The bill's defeat came a day
after the law enforcement authorities held a rally at the capitol in
support of the bill, which could be used in about 62 hate crimes
annually committed in the state. But senators who voted against it said
they feared the bill would diminish the rights of those who are not
members of the protected groups contained in the bill. Sen. Dave Thomas
(R-South Weber) said he feared prosecutors might use the legislation to
stack charges against offenders. [more]
Republican Effort to Eliminate New Hanmpshire hate Crimes law DefeatedHouse Bill 136 sought to remove increased legal penalties for crimes
substantially motivated by hostility toward the victim’s religion,
race, creed, sexual orientation, national origin or sex. By a final
vote of 298-48, the House voted Tuesday to support the Committee on
Criminal Justice and Public Safety’s recommendation to kill the
bill. The legislation’s primary sponsor, Rep. Elbert Bicknell,
R-Northwood, argued that those who believed he and his co-sponsors were
"bigots" did not know him or the real intent of the bill. Bicknell
noted that during the 1950s, while serving in the armed forces and
stationed in Georgia, he often escorted a black woman to functions
where he was the only white person. [more] Sorry redneck. You're still a bigot.