duck wrote:darvlay wrote:duck wrote:The problem with a preventative hate law is it's ability to be abused. I'm from the south and any time a white-on-black crime took place race was automatically assumed to be a motive and it was investigated as a hate crime. Sometimes this was the case but often times it wasn't and there was a completely seperate motive having nothing to do with race, but nevertheless it was pursued as a hate crime, which carries heavier punishment. That's why I would say they should not be in place everywhere and at times they are overused.
How it that abuse of the law? It's the burden of the prosecutor to prove that a hate crime has taken place. If he feels there is necessary evidence for a conviction, why should he not pursue it? That's how the courts work.
Like I said, I'm in the South. It's really easy to prove. Basically if at any point you have said the n word or called someone black, even as a description, you are racist.. I suppose it's not the systems fault it is this way, but the general perception is that some amount of racism/hate is involved in inter-racial crimes. And like others have said, is there some reason the punishment should be greater if it is a hate crime? The heavier punishment makes no sense to me except that it is there to appease activists.
If the guy attacking the black guy is dumb enough to yell 'you dumb nigger' then it probably was a hate crime, and if it wasn't then the guy is stupid enough to deserve it.