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"This all kind of normalizes abuse toward a population that is just so unprotected," said Neil Donovan, the coalition's executive director. Still, many say attacks against the homeless are hard to classify as hate-fuelled violence because the crimes do not involve derogatory symbols or epithets. Others point to homelessness as a transitory state, unlike race, gender or ethnicity. The key element in homeless crime, they say, is the victim's weakness. "They are crimes of opportunity -- you do it because it's easy," said Mark Potok, spokesman for the Southern Poverty Law Center, which monitors hate groups. "These crimes are, in effect, a way of making the powerless feel powerful." Homeless people say safety is a constant concern. Many buddy up at night or arm themselves with knives or boxcutters. Joe Thomas, a 60-year-old Vietnam veteran who's been living on the streets of downtown LA for the past year, said he seeks out benches in well lit areas. "You have people who have a thing about people being homeless," he said. "We had kids coming down here about three months ago, hitting people in the head with a baseball bat."
Deanna Weakly said women are particularly vulnerable. She spent the last four years homeless before obtaining a federally sponsored apartment last month. With far fewer shelter beds for women, security guards often demand sex or food in exchange for a cot, she said, so she spent nights catnapping on buses, then moved into a county hospital lobby. If men made advances, she screamed at the top of her lungs to scare them off. "I'd be wandering around at 3-4 in the morning with my bags, looking for a place to sleep. I was always kind of ready to give up my life," the 50-year-old former real estate agent said. "I always had to have my guard up." For McGraham-Paisley, her older brother's death has made her painfully aware of the plight of homeless people and what she says is a woeful lack of compassion for them. "My brother did not make a choice to be homeless. He was mentally ill. We didn't abandon him. We tried to get him help. We'd contact agencies and they said they'd go out there, but we'd never hear back," she said. "That person is a human being. There has to be a solution."
[Associated
Press;
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