Incidents and Offenses: Hate Crime Statistics, 2006
Incidents and Offenses: Hate Crime Statistics, 2006
Incidents and Offenses: Hate Crime Statistics, 2006
The UCR Program collects data about both single-bias and multiple-bias hate crimes.
For each offense type reported, law enforcement must indicate at least one bias
motivation. A single-bias incident is defined as an incident in which one or more offense
types are motivated by the same bias. A multiple-bias incident is defined as an incident
in which more than one offense type occurs and at least two offense types are motivated
by different biases.
• In 2006, 2,105 law enforcement agencies reported 7,722 hate crime incidents
involving 9,080 offenses.
• There were 7,720 single-bias incidents that involved 9,076 offenses, 9,642 victims
and 7,324 offenders. (See Table 1.)
Single-Bias Incidents
An analysis of the 7,720 single-bias incidents reported in 2006 reveals the following:
Of the 9,076 single-bias hate crime offenses reported in the above incidents:
• 1.0 percent were the consequences of biases against disability. (Based on Table 1.)
Racial bias
In 2006, law enforcement agencies reported that 4,737 single-bias hate crime offenses
were racially motivated. Of these offenses:
• 6.1 percent were driven by bias against groups of individuals consisting of more
than one race (anti-multiple races, group).
Religious bias
Hate crimes motivated by religious bias accounted for 1,597 offenses reported by law
enforcement. A breakdown of the bias motivation of religious-bias offenses showed:
Sexual-orientation bias
In 2006, law enforcement agencies reported 1,415 hate crime offenses based on sexual-
orientation bias. Of these offenses:
Of the single-bias incidents, 1,233 offenses were committed based on the perceived
ethnicity or national origin of the victim. Of these offenses:
• 37.6 percent were anti-other ethnicity/national origin biased. (Based on Table 1.)
Disability bias
There were 94 reported hate crime offenses committed based on disability bias.
By Offense Types
• The remaining 8.2 percent of hate crimes were comprised of additional crimes
against persons, property, and society. (Based on Table 2.)
• Approximately 0.4 percent were crimes against society. (Based on Table 2.) (See
Data Collection in Methodology.)
Law enforcement reported 5,449 hate crime offenses as crimes against persons. By
offense type:
• 0.3 percent involved the offense category other, which is collected only in the
National Incident-Based Reporting System. (Based on Table 2.)
• The majority of the 3,593 crimes against property (81.0 percent) were acts of
destruction/damage/vandalism.
• The remaining 19.0 percent of crimes against property consisted of robbery, burglary,
larceny-theft, motor vehicle theft, arson, and other crimes. (Based on Table 2.)
Thirty-eight offenses were crimes against society (e.g., drug or narcotic offenses or
prostitution).
By Victim Type
• The remaining 19.8 percent were directed at other, multiple, or unknown victim
types. (Based on Table 6.)