Crime & Safety

Graph: Hate Crimes In Minnesota, Broken Down By City

The FBI's annual Hate Crimes Statistics report shows an increase in the number of such crimes in Minnesota and in the country overall.

MINNEAPOLIS — The FBI documented a sharp increase in hate crimes in 2017 compared to 2016, including a 37 percent spike in anti-Jewish offenses and a 23 percent increase in overall religious-based crimes.

Whether more hate crimes were reported to police in 2017 than in 2016 is difficult to ascertain because there were an additional 1,000 law enforcement agencies that participated in the program compared to the previous year. Such stark increases, though, indicate more and more people and institutions are being targeted because of religion. According to the Anti Defamation League, the 1,564 religion-based hate crimes reported in 2017 are the second-highest ever. The highest number of such crimes were reported in the aftermath of the September 11 terrorist attacks, according to the ADL.

Part of the FBI’s Uniform Crime Reporting Program, the agency’s Hate Crime Statistics report is released annually. In 2017, law enforcement agencies reported 7,175 hate crimes to the FBI. While 16,149 agencies participated in 2017, only 2,040 submitted incident reports about hate crimes. The remaining agencies reported 0 hate crimes to the FBI. In 2016, the FBI documented 6,121 hate crimes.

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“Two weeks ago, we witnessed the most deadly anti-Semitic hate crime in American history. Today, we have another FBI study showing a big jump in hate crimes against Americans because of their race, religion, ethnicity, and sexual orientation,” Jonathan A. Greenblatt, ADL CEO and National Director, said in a statement. “This report provides further evidence that more must be done to address the divisive climate of hate in America. That begins with leaders from all walks of life and from all sectors of society forcefully condemning anti-Semitism, bigotry, and hate whenever it occurs.”

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In Minnesota, 353 law enforcement agencies provided information to the FBI but only 42 agencies actually reported hate crimes.

Collectively, the 42 agencies reported 146 hate crimes to the FBI in 2018, an increase from the number of documented hate crimes in 2016 (119).

Below you will find a chart document the cities where hate crimes were reported last year. The chart is broken down by agency and the bias motivation for the crime.

Hate Crime Incidents Per Bias Motivation, 2017:

Agency nameNumber of incidents per bias motivation: Race/ Ethnicity/ AncestryReligionSexual orientationDisabilityGenderGender identityPopulation
Apple Valley152,439
Belle Plaine17,066
Blaine363,857
Brooklyn Park5180,347
Burnsville1161,442
Clearbrook1522
Coon Rapids
162,495
Crookston
17,789
Duluth1186,306
Eden Prairie164,429
Edina
151,923
Forest Lake
119,804
Fridley
127,516
Goodhue11,186
Inver Grove Heights4135,254
Lakeville42162,958
Mankato142,047
Maple Grove2270,966
Maplewood540,689
Minneapolis1678418,971
Moorhead2142,999
New Brighton122,772
Northfield120,512
Oakdale128,181
Plymouth0178,356
Rochester103115,228
Roseville
136,196
Sartell
117,353
Savage1131,491
Spring Lake Park16,482
St. Anthony19,159
St. Cloud1167,911
St. Louis Park34249,355
Stillwater
119,394
UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA3251,579
St. Paul1151306,696
Willmar0119,553

According to the FBI, a majority of the victims (59.6 percent) were targeted because of a bias towards race, ethnicity or ancestry. The second most common reason a victim was targeted was because of religion (20.6 percent) followed by sexual-orientation (15.8 percent), disability (1.9 percent), gender identity (1.6 percent) and gender (0.6 percent), according to the statistics.

The FBI says 50.7 percent of known offenders were white, 21.3 percent were African-American and other races accounted for the remaining known offenders. According to the FBI, a “known offender” does not imply that a suspect’s identity is known but that “some aspect of the suspect was identified.”

Experts say the annual hate crime statistics report provides an incomplete picture of the number of hate crimes in the country. The ADL noted that in the 2017 report, 91 cities that had a population of 100,000 or more either did not report any data to the FBI or reported 0 instances of hate crimes.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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