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House approves stronger hate crimes legislation

valdez hate crimes quote

OLYMPIA – The Washington State House of Representatives approved a bill that would strengthen Washington’s hate crimes statutes by a vote of 85-12 on Thursday.

Under current law, crimes motivated by hate are prosecuted as “Malicious Harassment.” HB 1732, sponsored by Rep. Javier Valdez, D-Seattle, would more clearly call out these offenses for what they are by renaming the violations “Hate Crime Offenses” in state law.

“Words matter,” said Valdez. “We’re no longer going to be calling this ‘malicious harassment.’ It’s not malicious harassment. It’s hate. When someone does bad things to people based on their gender, their race, their sexual orientation, or their gender identity, that’s a hate crime.”

The legislation adds “gender identity or expression” to the list of protected categories. HB 1732 also increases the maximum civil liability for those guilty of committing hate crimes from $10,000 to $100,000.

The bill creates an advisory work group that would take a closer look to identifying the root causes of and preventing hate crimes. The work group must submit a report to the Legislature with recommendations on preventing hate crimes through public awareness campaigns, increasing the reporting of hate crimes, providing law enforcement more tools to investigate and prosecute hate crimes, and supporting victims of hate crimes.

The number of reported hate crimes has been on the rise in recent years.

HB 1732 will now go to the Senate for consideration. The 2019 legislative session is scheduled to adjourn for the year on April 28.

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