Reported hate crimes rising in Canada. Here's how police investigate and prosecute them
Police-reported crimes targeting Muslims rose by 9% in 2019, according to StatsCan
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Police-reported hate crime has been on the rise across Canada in the last few years.
Statistics Canada data suggests that in 2017, they spiked by about 47 per cent and increased again in 2019 by seven per cent. That same year, police-reported hate crime targeting Muslims rose by nine per cent.
To help tackle the issue, the federal government hosted two emergency summits last week — one on antisemitism and another on Islamophobia.
Those summits came after four members of a family were killed in a truck attack in London, Ont., while out on a walk June 6, in what police say was an incident motivated by anti-Muslim hate.
In nearby Hamilton, a 40-year-old Cambridge man was arrested earlier this month after allegedly uttering death threats and using racist slurs toward a Muslim mother and daughter. Police have labelled it a hate crime.
Days later, a mosque in Cambridge was severely vandalized in what officials described as an "act of hate," though a police investigation concluded it wasn't a hate crime.
According to a survey from the Angus Reid Institute, about 60 per cent of respondents say they've experienced anti-Asian hate in the last year.
Q&A with WRPS
With the marked increases in such incidents, CBC Kitchener-Waterloo reached out to police experts to ask how hate crimes are investigated, what it takes to prosecute them and what police are doing to ensure they don't happen again.
The Morning Edition's Craig Norris spoke to two members of the Waterloo Regional Police Service: Staff Sgt. Eric Boynton with the Equity, Diversity and Inclusion Unit, and Det.-Const. Ernie Friesen with Criminal Intelligence – Gangs and Hate Crime Unit.
Here's what they had to say:
Q: What constitutes a hate or racially motivated crime?
Friesen: "Generally speaking, most crime in our community has a similar motive, which is usually a monetary thing, whether they're trying to recover money or it's addiction-related. But in the case of hate crime, these crimes are motivated generally by a bias or hate. When we have evidence to suggest that that is the cause of a crime being committed or was a significant factor in that crime being committed, then we start considering it to hate elements."
Q: How are these incidents investigated? What are some examples of evidence that you would use?
Friesen: "In a lot of cases, hate crime is very evident to see early on, whether it's graffiti that's of a sensitive nature that immediately identifies it as hate-related, or perhaps if it's something like an unprovoked act of violence.
Generally speaking, things like assaults often have some other contributing factor behind it. But a hate crime doesn't necessarily have readily identifiable motive. So that's a factor we have to look at as well. What started the incident? That can contribute to a hate crime. So things that occur like graffiti, slurs particular to an identifiable group or person … If the incident takes place in relation to, let's say, a religious or culturally sensitive holiday. Those are things we consider as well."
Q: What role does the Equity, Diversity and Inclusion Unit play when it comes to these investigations?
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Boynton: The team conducts a victim-centred approach to the investigation.
"We see the victim as not only the individual or individuals impacted by a particular crime or occurrence, but also the community around them … After the investigation has been done and often at times throughout it, we will engage with the victim to provide support from community organizations that may have a particular expertise in dealing with that type of thing.
"Also. engage with those who may not at all themselves be involved in the matter, but as you can imagine, these hate-related incidences have a ripple effect to others in the community, and we try to provide that wraparound approach so that the totality of harm can be addressed by what's happened from a variety of avenues."
Q: Data suggests hate crimes are on a rise in Canada. More recently, there have been several targeted attacks against Muslims. How does information like that impact a local police investigation involving a possible hate crime, or does it?
Boynton: