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Lecture #4: Hate Crimes
13

Life skills lecture#4

Aug 18, 2015

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Page 1: Life skills lecture#4

Lecture #4: Hate Crimes

Page 2: Life skills lecture#4

Matthew Shepard• A 21 year old college student

at University of Wyoming• He was openly gay• Oct. 6, 1998 he hitched a ride

home from a bar with Aaron McKinney and Russell Henderson

• Instead, he was taken to a remote area and was robbed, pistol-whipped, tortured and left tied to a fence

Page 3: Life skills lecture#4

Matthew Shepard• Shepard was discovered 18

hours later– Still alive but in a coma

• Injuries included: – skull fractures to the back of the

head and ears– Brainstem damage– Facial lacerations or cuts– Coma from brain damage

• Pronounced dead on Oct. 12

Page 4: Life skills lecture#4

Matthew Shepard• Both Aaron McKinney and

Russell Henderson were convicted and are serving two consecutive life sentences– Not charged with a hate crime

because one did not exist in Wyoming yet

• His case, along with James Byrd Jr’s would encourage a national hate crime law and tracking network.

Page 5: Life skills lecture#4

Matthew Shepard

• The Shepard case drew nationwide attention for its brutality but also it shined a light on an area in America that is still uncomfortable for most. – LGBTQ hate crimes

• While he was still in a coma, Fred Phelps from the Westboro Baptist Church led a protest that included the message “Fag Matt in Hell” and “No Tears for Queers”

Page 6: Life skills lecture#4

James Byrd Jr.• June 7, 1998• Picked up by three white

men after he was attempting to hitchhike back into town

• Beaten severely, urinated on and then chained by his ankles to the truck and dragged for three miles (equal distance as M-A to Stanford)

Page 7: Life skills lecture#4

James Byrd Jr.• Due to hard asphalt surface Byrd’s remains were scattered over the length of roadway (over 80 different places)

• Died after his head and right arm were severed – Autopsy suggested Byrd

remained alive through much of the dragging

• His lower torso was dumped in an old slave cemetery and the three men attended a BBQ later on

Page 8: Life skills lecture#4

James Byrd Jr.• The trial and ensuing media

attention divided the small town of Jasper, TX

• All three men were convicted and the main culprit, John King expressed pride and no remorse or guilt

• In 2004, two teenagers were arrested after they wrote racial slurs and damaged James Byrd Jr’s gravestone

Page 9: Life skills lecture#4

Hate Crime Statistics

• Nationwide 6,628 hate crime incidents– 1,092 in California alone

• 47.3% race related• 20% religion• 19.3% sexual orientation• 12.8% ethnicity/national

origin

Page 10: Life skills lecture#4

Matthew Shepard and James Byrd Jr. Hate Crime Prevention Act

• Passed on Oct. 22, 2009• Expanded the original 1969 hate-crime law to

include crimes motivated by sexual orientation and gender identity

• Establishes annual funding for the FBI to record and track all hate crimes including those against LGBTQ

• Allows the federal gov’t to more easily investigate hate crimes, even if the local authorities choose not to.

Page 11: Life skills lecture#4

Southern Poverty Law Center

• Hate crimes are often still voluntary and therefore total incidents could be as high as 50,000

• Based on numbers: – Everyday 8 blacks, 3 LGBTQ, and 1 Latino are

subjected to hate violence

Page 12: Life skills lecture#4

Transgender-student bill

• August 2013 – Gov. Jerry Brown (CA) signed into law a bill that allows transgender students access/choice in which bathroom and locker room to get dressed in. – Before this, schools either had separate facilities

or they were forced to use same sex bathrooms, despite not identifying as that sex.

Page 13: Life skills lecture#4

But how is that fair to me…?

• While a law to benefit only a minority population might feel unfair to the majority, consider the following statistics:

• Until 1967 interracial marriage was illegal throughout most of the American south. – Only 20% of ALL Americans believe interracial marriage was

acceptable. Today that number is close to 90%• 1890s Most doctors believed ‘men’ to be intellectually

superior to ‘women’ due to the size of their skulls. – In addition, it was believed women were susceptible to fits of

insanity during their menstrual cycle