Hate crimes in New York City have increased 76% so far this year compared to the same period last year, according to data from the New York Police Department Hate Crimes Task Force (HCTF) released this week. 194 hate crimes occurred between January 1 and April 10 of this year, in comparison to the 110 hate crimes from the same dates in 2021.
The data was released as the city continues to experience a wave in violent crime incidents in 2022, as Mayor Eric Adams launched his plan to combat violence and crime in the city. The plan also addresses homelessness, particularly within the subway system, involving the expansion of response teams of health, police and community officials around the city.
Crime incidents targeted at Jewish people increased from 28 crimes last year to 86 so far in 2022, according to the data. Some examples these crimes against Jewish people so far in 2022 include a swastika being painted on a school bus, multiple people being physically assaulted in Brooklyn, and a teen accused of threatening six Jewish boys with a sword in the Upper West Side.
Crimes against colored people have doubled, with the number of targeted incidents this year standing at 26 compared to 13 in the same time period last year, according to the HCTF data. Hate crimes against Asians were down 32% compared to 2021, with 47 last year and 32 in the same period this year. Crimes targeted over sexual orientation increased by 12, according to the HCTF.
Mayor Adams unveiled his ‘Blueprint to End Gun Violence’ in January, which includes long-term goals to grow economic opportunities, improve child education and provide more access to mental health resources while addressing the gun problem. Some high-profile violent attacks have occurred in the city in the past few weeks. A 62-year-old man named Frank James was arrested this week after he boarded a train in Brooklyn, set off smoke grenades and fired a gun 33 times, shooting 10 people. He was charged with violating a law prohibiting terrorism and violent attacks on mass transportation. James had talked about violence and mass shootings in videos posted on YouTube, focusing on a group of people he believed had maligned him, in addition to broad societal and racial groups he appeared to hate.