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    Murders of LGBT and HIV-positive people in the US rise 11% in 2014

    National Coalition of Anti-Violence Programs publishes report on hate violence which finds non-lethal attacks against same groups have decreased, but transgender women of color are still at high risk of homicide
    transgender violence day of remembrance
    Murdered transgender women are commemorated during a Transgender Day of Remembrance event in Washington DC. The NCAVP reports that 55% of LGBT homicide victims are trans women.
    Homicides targeting LGBTQ and HIV-positive people rose by 11% in the US last year, making 2014 the deadliest year for people in those communities since 2012, a new report has shown.
    The National Coalition of Anti-Violence Programs (NCAVP) published its comprehensive report on hate violence experienced by LGBTQ people in the last year. While the report shows that non-lethal attacks against LGBTQ and HIV-positive people has decreased, transgender women of color were still found to be at high risk of murder.
    “This year, the report reconfirms some of the trends we’ve seen for multiple years and that includes a high number of homicides,” Chai Jindasurat, co-director of community organizing and public advocacy told the Guardian.
    LGBTQ homicides
    There were 20 homicides last year, according to NCAVP’s data, with 80% being people of color and more than half being transgender woman. Photograph: NCAVP
    “Homicides against LGBT people remain high with transgender people of color bearing the brunt of it,” he said.
    There were 20 homicides last year, according to NCAVP’s data, with 80% being people of color and more than half being transgender women.
    So far in 2015, there have been eight confirmed killings of transgender women of color. The FBI just began documenting hate crimes towards transgender people for the first time in 2014, thoughthe NCAVP called the FBI’s numbers “incredibly low”.
    According to the NCAVP, the decrease in non-lethal attacks reported by police doesn’t mean the violence is necessarily going down. Rather, police are not labeling crimes as bias-motivated.
    The report found that just 6% of hate violence being reported to police is being labeled as such.
    “With biased crimes, it seems like pulling teeth to get them to check that extra box in the paperwork,” said Justin Shaw, executive director of the Kansas City Anti-Violence Project, a partner organization of the study, said last year, after the murder Dionte Greene, a young gay black man in Kansas City, Missouri.
    “We hear so many incidents that happen and get labeled simple assault when there is an obvious hate component – it feels as if we are stuck in a paperwork cycle with people’s lives.”
    Overall, 54% of LGBTQ people reported violence to police when it occurred, according to the report, a nine-point increase from 2014. They were also 2.4 times more likely than any other group to experience violence from the police when reporting.
    “Reports to police increased in 2014, but that is not surprising in a year where homicides and severity of violence are high, situations in which police are intervening or being called to intervene,” said Lynne Sprague from Survivors Organizing for Liberation (formerly the Colorado Anti-Violence Program). “With this report, we are calling for an end to the profiling, police violence, and misconduct that happens when LGBTQ and HIV-affected survivors do report.”
    NCAVP’s 2014 hate violence report documented 1,359 incidents of anti-LGBTQ violence in 2014 – a 32% decrease from the 2,001 total incidents reported in 2013.
    The network has been reporting on violence targeting LGBTQ and HIV-positive people since 1989, and while many may see this decrease assomething to celebrate, NCAVP sees the opposite.
    “This decrease should not be an indication that anti-LGBTQ hate violence is declining,” said Jindasurat. “In fact it should be a call to action for policymakers, funders, and service providers to increase funding, legislation, public awareness and outreach that encourages reporting of hate violence incidents and promotes safety for LGBTQ and HIV-affected.”
    “I think that is why this report is important, because we know that a lot of progress has happened and we are very happy with the culture change happening in the country,” Jindasurat said. “But it is still a deadly risk to be LGBTQ.”

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    • 3 4
      There were 20 homicides last year
      That is about 1/1000 of all homicides in the US. Is that out of line with their number in the population. Are they really less than 0.1% of all people? I could swear we've been told here they are at least 10 times more than that.
      Reply |
      • 4 5
        Well now you're expecting a reasonable analysis of the data, you'll have to go somewhere else for that. All you will get here is an inflammatory headline and a rehash of a press-release.
        Reply |
      • 2 3
        That won't be the figure of all LGBT people killed in the US last year, as that figure is likely to be unidentifiable. Those are the homicides that have been reported to the group collating the report and identified as an LGBT person having been killed due to being LGBT.
        Reply |
      • 0 1
        That won't be the figure of all LGBT people killed in the US last year
        I assumed it was the figure for the "T" in LGBT. If only 20 "LGBT" were killed last year that is a spectacular result.
        My broader point is that without proper context these figures mean next to nothing.
        Reply |
    • 1 2
      11% increase to 20 LGBTQ documented homicides. So from 18 to 20 homicides.
      This data has absolutely 0 statistical significance. It is sad that the number is greater than 0 and this kind of information should be collected but no real conclusions can be drawn from it.
      According to the NCAVP, the decrease in non-lethal attacks reported by police doesn’t mean the violence is necessarily going down. Rather, police are not labeling crimes as bias-motivated.
      This article cites statistically useless data that supports some narrative, then brings into question any data which does not support that narrative.
      The report found that just 6% of hate violence being reported to police is being labeled as such.
      Then we are to trust this statistic? This number needs alot more fleshing out.
      In summary there were 10 (reported) transgender women of color murdered in 2014 and that's 10 more than there should be, but there are precious few conclusions to be drawn regarding crime statistics from the information presented here.
      Reply |
    • 0 1
      This is not a good day for statistics in the Guardian.
      Reply |
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