Shortly after the incident, Kentucky State Representatives
Jason Nemes and
Jerry Miller pre-filed a bill to supplement the state's
hate-crime law. The bill calls for a person to be charged with a
hate crime, in addition to the homicide charge, if the crime was found to be motivated by "race, color, religion, sexual orientation or national origin." They added
criminal homicide and
fetal homicide as crimes to be covered as hate crimes. Many politicians cautioned that law enforcement investigations needed to be completed before the shootings could be classified as a hate crime. The Kroger shooting was followed by a mass shooting at a synagogue in Squirrel Hill, a neighborhood of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Referring to both crimes,
Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell released a statement saying, "If these aren't definitions of hate crimes, I don't know what a hate crime is." He called for Bush to receive the
death penalty if convicted of the charges. Many activist groups, such as Kentucky Alliance Against Racist and Political Repression and
Showing Up for Racial Justice, met with local politicians to urge that Bush be charged with a hate crime. They expressed concern that he might escape justice by using mental illness as a defense. As one member told officials, "Mental illness does not prompt you to wake up wanting to kill black people. Mental illness does not discriminate as this man did." According to
CNN, the event was one of three hate-motivated events that took place in the United States the same week, along with
a shooting at a synagogue in
Pittsburgh and
a series of mail bombing attempts. An interfaith moment of silence for memorial and unity was declared by mayor
Greg Fischer of Louisville on October 31 in remembrance of those persons killed at the Kroger grocery and the eleven victims at the Pittsburgh synagogue. == See also ==