The breakdown below refers only to offences with one recorded bias. An additional 169 offences were reported as committed with two or more biases and are not presented here.
The Federal Bureau of Investigation's Uniform Crime Reporting (UCR) Program and Civil Rights Unit (CRU) collaborated to gather hate crime incident data investigated and reported by the CRU for 2018. As a result, FBI hate crime data is for the first time included in the 2018 hate crime publication, in addition to data from other federal, state, local and tribal law enforcement agencies.
In August, the Department of Justice (DoJ) Hate Crimes Initiative convened the first-ever federal seminar on Investigating and Prosecuting Hate Crimes and Domestic Terrorism, bringing together 70 Department civil rights and domestic terrorism prosecutors and agents to discuss how to better collaborate when investigating and prosecuting hate crimes that also constitute acts of domestic terrorism. In October, the Department's Hate Crimes Initiative convened a law enforcement roundtable on hate crimes. The event brought state, local and tribal law enforcement leaders from around the country together with DoJ officials. The participants agreed that in order to improve investigation and reporting of hate crimes, the federal government should support hate crimes training at all levels of law enforcement. The DoJ also launched a new hate crimes website – www.justice.gov/hatecrimes – designed to provide a centralized portal for the Department's hate crimes resources for law enforcement, media, researchers, victims, advocacy groups, and other related organizations and individuals.
The DoJ also announced a grant of more than USD 840,000 to the University of New Hampshire to conduct a national survey of hate crime incidents and victimization. The multi-phase study, funded by the National Institute of Justice (NIJ) in the Department's Office of Justice Programs, will run through 2021 and provide detailed data about hate crimes, analyse local policies that impact hate crime reporting and identify successful investigation and prosecution strategies.
This category includes hate crimes committed on the grounds of race, ethnicity and ancestry.
Anti-Semitic hate crimes were originally reported under the category of anti-religious hate crime.
Anti-Muslim hate crimes were originally reported under the category of anti-religious hate crime.
Anti-Christian hate crimes were originally reported under the category of anti-religious hate crime and include hate crimes against Catholics, Protestants, Jehovah's Witnesses, Mormons, Eastern Orthodox and Other Christians.
This category includes hate crimes targeting Hindus, Sikhs, Buddhists and other faith groups, as well as Atheists/Agnostics.
Official figures recorded 58 gender-based hate crimes, of which 32 were anti-female and 26 anti-male.
Official figures recorded 1,404 hate crimes based on sexual orientation, including 20 anti-heterosexual hate crimes, and 184 hate crimes based on gender identity.
ODIHR observes that the United States has not reported information on prosecuted and sentenced hate crime cases to ODIHR.