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LULAC Urges Increased Protections For Latinos In U.S.

Washington, DC - The League of United Latin American Citizens (LULAC) said today the just released Federal Bureau of Investigation report shows data that confirms white nationalist hate groups are increasing dramatically targeting communities of color and members of the LGBTQ community.

“Today’s numbers from the FBI prove Latinos, Blacks, the Arab, Muslim and LGBTQ communities are among those wearing a target on their back every day in America,” says Domingo Garcia, LULAC National President. “It has been placed on them because of blind hate fueled by the politics of distrust and division from President Trump and far right-wing political attacks. We urge President-elect Biden to form a task force that will have the powers to swiftly address this danger with the FBI and local law enforcement “says Garcia.

The report reveals that white nationalist hate groups increased 55% in 2019 across the United States and 43% for anti-LGBTQ hate groups. The FBI says it has identified a total of 940 hate groups in the country, a slight drop from the soaring trend seen since 2015, in part attributed to the collapse of two neo-Nazi organizations. Also, 2019 saw 51 murders attributed to hate crimes, making it the worst year ever recorded by the federal government. The FBI numbers show that individuals are being are being radicalized and recruited using social media to spread their propaganda against Latinos, Blacks, Jews, Muslims and other non-white and minority groups.

“There can be no room any longer in our country for harm inflicted on innocent people simply because of their appearance or the person they love,” says Sindy Benavides, LULAC National Chief Executive Officer. “This is not who we are as Americans and inevitably anyone can become an outcast in the eyes of those who seek to find differences to divide us and weaken what we stand for. Every reasonable American can and must now begin the work of coming together after a very dark period of hate speech used for political gain and LULAC intends to be part of that movement as we have been for more than 91 years,” she added.

“When one individual is targeted by a hate crime, it hurts the whole community—that’s why people are feeling vulnerable and afraid,” said ADL CEO Jonathan Greenblatt. “We urge Congress to immediately pass the Jabara-Heyer NO HATE Act to improve hate crime training, prevention, reporting and best practices.”

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