Since 2017, California lawmakers have introduced more than a dozen bills aimed at hate crimes, including attempts to improve data, train police and establish a hotline.
Most of those bills died in committees, never getting a floor vote, according to a CalMatters analysis.

But in the wake of recent, highly visible crimes targeting Asian Americans, lawmakers are introducing some of the same measures their colleagues once rejected.

โ€œThere wasnโ€™t the same level of urgency that I think is true today,โ€ said Democratic Assemblymember David Chiu of San Francisco, who is reintroducing his bill from 2017 that would require the state attorney general to maintain a toll-free number where people could report hate crimes. 

โ€œThe Atlanta shooting woke up much of the rest of America to what those of us in the Asian American community have been experiencing for quite some time.โ€

Hate-Crimes Data Elusive

Hate-crimes data is spotty at best. A recent California State University, San Bernardino, study showed an uptick in anti-Asian hate crimes reported to police in 18 large American cities from 2019 to 2020. The numbers, however, are small. San Jose reported a rise from 4 to 10, while Los Angeles saw an increase from 7 to 15, the study showed.ย 

Experts say hate crimes are widely underreported, and even when they are, police officers sometimes fail to document incidents involving bias as a hate crime.

โ€œWe know that reporting rates of hate crimes by victims are really low,โ€ said Phyllis Gerstenfeld, a California State University, Stanislaus, criminal-justice professor and author of several textbooks on hate crimes.ย 

โ€œWeโ€™re not doing enough to reach out to potential victims, in part because victims donโ€™t know about the laws; they donโ€™t understand them; or they donโ€™t feel comfortable talking to police for a wide variety of reasons,โ€ Gerstenfeld said.ย 

California Department of Justice figures show that the state averaged 31 anti-Asian hate crimes a year between 2015 and 2019, as reported by local law-enforcement agencies. Itโ€™s a slight uptick from the years before, though the figures fluctuate and were higher in the early 2000s, when anti-Asian hate crimes accounted for more than 60 incidents a year.ย 

State data on 2020 isnโ€™t available, so the full impact of racist rhetoric surrounding the pandemic remains unclear. Still, some widely covered crimes have Asian-American communities on edge and officials looking to act.

In Oaklandโ€™s Chinatown, video of a 28-year-old man slamming a 91-year-old Asian man to the ground went viral. In San Francisco, a 75-year-old woman garnered national attention when she fended off an attacker with a wooden paddle. In Sacramento, police are investigating whether the vandalism of an Asian-owned gelato shopโ€”the third such incident at his business in a yearโ€”is a hate crime.

Obstaclesย in Filing Charges

Even when police label a case as a hate crime, prosecutors can have a hard time proving motive in court.

โ€œHate crimes are among some of the scariest and most vile crimes we deal with, and theyโ€™re some of the most difficult to prove,โ€ said San Francisco District Attorney Chesa Boudin.

In Long Beach, the Long Beach City Prosecutorโ€™s Office and the Long Beach Police Department received aย prize from the Anti-Defamation Leagueย for their roles in combating hate. The office filed hate crime charges in all of the cases referred to its office. City Prosecutor Doug Haubert attributes the cityโ€™s success at prosecuting hate crimes to having trained officers who know what to look for.

In Oaklandโ€™s Chinatown, video of a 28-year-old man slamming a 91-year-old Asian man to the ground went viral. In San Francisco, a 75-year-old woman garnered national attention when she fended off an attacker with a wooden paddle. In Sacramento, police are investigating whether the vandalism of an Asian-owned gelato shopโ€”the third such incident at his business in a yearโ€”is a hate crime.

โ€œWe handle so many cases so quickly, that unless the report itself or the officer noted that, โ€˜Hey this could potentially be a hate crime,โ€™ itโ€™s unlikely to go noted by the prosecuting office,โ€ Haubert said.ย 

Some organizationsโ€”including the California District Attorneys Associationโ€”are trying to make it easier for prosecutors to bring such cases, and to increase penalties.

Larry Morse, legislative director for the association, said itโ€™s time to examine the laws on the books and determine whether they are adequate.

โ€œWe havenโ€™t introduced many bills along that line because this Legislature has not been inclined to create any new crimes or to increase punishment for any conduct,โ€ said Morse, a former Merced County district attorney.

The DAโ€™s association on Tuesday threw its support behind a bill by Democratic Assemblymember Jim Cooper of Elk Grove to increase penalties for some hate crimes. The group also opposed a measure to soften penalties for some robberies, suggesting the bills would โ€œlessen the consequences for violent crime and would directly benefit the predators currently committing hate crimes against Asian Americans,โ€ according to a statement from the association.

California does have a number of sentencing enhancements written into the penal code, such as adding time for a variety of crimes targeting victims on the basis of race, gender or bias. Thereโ€™s also a law making a hate crime a standalone misdemeanor.

Since 1978, California has made it a capital offense to kill someone because of their race, religion or for another bias-related reason. 

Gerstenfeld, the CSU-Stanislaus professor, said the state has plenty of laws that arenโ€™t being used that often, and the key to success with hate crimes prosecution is getting people to report them.

โ€œIf people donโ€™t feel comfortable dealing with the police, nobody is ever going to be aware that these crimes happened,โ€ she said. โ€œBetter training for police officers and prosecutors is also key.โ€

Lawmakers Circle Back

These are all things California lawmakers have pushed for in the past. 

Improving reporting is one reason Assemblymember David Chiu is reintroducing his hate-crimes hotline bill. He thinks it failed because of concerns over cost.

But thatโ€™s changed.

โ€œItโ€™s reached a point where we have to take action as a state, certainly as an Asian American,โ€ Chiu said. โ€œWhat weโ€™ve seen in this past year has been horrifying and cries out for response.โ€

He is also co-author of a bill that would push law enforcement agencies to better track hate crimes. It follows a 2018 State Auditor report that found โ€œunderreporting and misreporting of hate crimes among law enforcement agencies.โ€ย 

Chiu, whose parents immigrated from Taiwan, grew up in the Boston area in the 1970s. He said anti-Asian racism was a regular experience. He said good data is critical to understanding what minority communities often face.

โ€œThere are also many incidents of hate that donโ€™t rise to the level of a hate crime, but are disturbing nonetheless and need to be documented and understood for us to consider other policies to address them,โ€ he said.

California generally has strong laws meant to fight hate crimes, said Beth Holtzman, a lawyer with the Anti-Defamation League.

โ€œThe issue,โ€ she said, โ€œis with implementation.โ€

This article was originally published byย CalMatters.