Forty-seven states and the
District of Columbia have statutes criminalizing various types of bias-motivated violence or intimidation (the exceptions being
Arkansas,
South Carolina, and
Wyoming).
Georgia, whose hate crime statute was struck down by the Georgia Supreme Court in 2004, passed a new hate crime law in June 2020. Each of these statutes covers bias on the basis of race, religion, and ethnicity; 34 cover
disability; 34 of them cover sexual orientation; 30 cover gender; 24 cover transgender/gender-identity; 14 cover age; 6 cover political affiliation. and 3 along with Washington, D.C. cover homelessness. ; 1987 : Connecticut: Sexual orientation covered in hate crime statute ; 1988 : Wisconsin: Sexual orientation covered in hate crime statute ; 1989 : Minnesota: Sexual orientation covered in hate crime statute : Nevada: Sexual orientation covered in hate crime statute : Oregon: Sexual orientation covered in hate crime statute ; 1990 : District of Columbia: Sexual orientation and gender identity covered in hate crime statute : New Jersey: Sexual orientation covered in hate crime statute : Vermont: Sexual orientation covered in hate crime statute ; 1991 : Florida: Sexual orientation covered in hate crime statute : Illinois: Sexual orientation covered in hate crime statute : New Hampshire: Sexual orientation covered in hate crime statute ; 1992 : Iowa: Sexual orientation covered in hate crime statute : Michigan: Sexual orientation included in hate crime data collection only ; 1993 : Maine: Sexual orientation covered in hate crime statute : Minnesota: Gender identity covered in hate crime statute : Texas: Sexual orientation covered in hate crime statute : Washington: Sexual orientation covered in hate crime statute ; 1996 : Massachusetts: Sexual orientation covered in hate crime statute ; 1997 : Delaware: Sexual orientation covered in hate crime statute : Louisiana: Sexual orientation covered in hate crime statute : Nebraska: Sexual orientation covered in hate crime statute ; 1998 : California: Gender identity covered in hate crime statute : Rhode Island: Sexual orientation covered in hate crime statute ; 1999 : Missouri: Sexual orientation and gender identity covered in hate crime statute : Vermont: Gender identity covered in hate crime statute ; 2000 : Georgia: Sexual orientation and gender identity covered in hate crime statute : Indiana: Sexual orientation included in hate crime data collection only : Kentucky: Sexual orientation covered in hate crime statute : New York: Sexual orientation covered in hate crime statute : Tennessee: Sexual orientation covered in hate crime statute ; 2002 : Kansas: Sexual orientation covered in hate crime statute : Pennsylvania: Sexual orientation and gender identity covered in hate crime statute : Puerto Rico: Sexual orientation and gender identity covered in hate crime statute ; 2003 : Arizona: Sexual orientation covered in hate crime statute : Hawaii: Sexual orientation and gender identity covered in hate crime statute : New Mexico: Sexual orientation and gender identity covered in hate crime statute ; 2004 : Connecticut: Gender identity covered in hate crime statute : Georgia: Sexual orientation and gender identity no longer explicitly listed as protected class in hate crime statute by the
Supreme Court of Georgia (U.S. state) ; 2005 : Colorado: Sexual orientation and gender identity covered in hate crime statute : Maryland: Sexual orientation and gender identity covered in hate crime statute ; 2008 : New Jersey: Gender identity covered in hate crime statute : Oregon: Gender identity covered in hate crime statute : Pennsylvania: Sexual orientation and gender identity no longer explicitly listed as protected class in hate crime statute by the
Supreme Court of Pennsylvania ; 2012 : Massachusetts: Gender identity covered in hate crime statute : Rhode Island: Gender identity covered in hate crime statute ; 2013 : Delaware: Gender identity covered in hate crime statute : Nevada: Gender identity covered in hate crime statute ; 2014 : United States Virgin Islands: Sexual orientation and gender identity covered in hate crime statute ; 2016 : Illinois: Gender identity covered in hate crime statute ; 2019 : Tennessee: Gender Identity covered in hate crime statute : Indiana: Sexual orientation covered in hate crime statute : Utah: Sexual orientation and gender identity covered in hate crime statute : Maine: Sexual orientation and gender identity covered in hate crime statute : New Hampshire: Gender identity covered in hate crime statute : Washington State: Gender identity covered in hate crime statute : New York State: Gender identity covered in hate crime statute ; 2020 : Georgia: Sexual orientation and gender identity covered in hate crime statute :
Police and firefighters On May 26, 2016,
Louisiana was the first state to add
police officers and
firefighters to their state hate crime statute, when Governor
John Bel Edwards signed an amendment from the legislature into law. This amendment was added, in part, as a response to the
Black Lives Matter movement, which seeks to end
police brutality against black people, with some advocates of the amendment using the slogan "
Blue Lives Matter". Since the inception of Black Lives Matter, critics have found some of the movement's rhetoric anti-police, with the author of the amendment,
Lance Harris, stating some "were employing a deliberate campaign to terrorize our officers". Despite
the killing of a Texas sheriff in 2015 and
the killings of two NYPD officers in the previous year, in response to the
death of Eric Garner and the
shooting of Michael Brown, there was little to no data suggesting hate crimes against law enforcement were a common problem when the bill was passed. A little less than two months after the amendment was passed,
Baton Rouge was in the national spotlight after the
Baton Rouge Police killing of
Alton Sterling by two white police officers. This sparked protests in Baton Rouge, resulting in hundreds of arrests and increased racial tension nationally. In the week during those protests,
five police officers were killed in Dallas, and the week after the protests,
four more officers were killed in Baton Rouge. Both perpetrators were killed and the motives behind both shootings were responses to the recent killings of Black men by police officers. In 2017, Kentucky became the second state making it a hate crime to attack police officers or emergency responders. This was part of a trend in "
blue lives matter" legislation, encouraged by
The Heritage Foundation and ideologues such as
Edwin Meese and
Bernard Kerik. That same year, Mississippi expanded its hate crime law to cover law enforcement officers, firefighters, and emergency workers. In 2019, Utah added status as a police officer or emergency responder to the list of protected classes. In 2020, Georgia enacted a new law creating the crime of bias-motivated intimidation, applying to attacks on police officers, firefighters, or emergency medical technicians. == Data collection statutes ==