"If
you are going to commit a hate crime in New York City, we will
find you," New York City Police Commissioner Dermot Shea said in
unveiling the two-pronged plan to fight bias crimes.
"We are not going to tolerate anyone being targeted because of
the color of their skin, the religion they worship, their sexual
preference or anything else," Shea said.
Just days after a spate of assaults on Asian-Americans in New
York City last weekend, Shea said he was ramping up the NYPD's
undercover force with plain-clothed officers, all of them of
Asian descent. Starting this weekend, they will patrol subways,
grocery stores and other locations to stem anti-Asian incidents
that total 26 so far this year, including 12 assaults, police
said.
"The next person you target through speech or menacing activity
may be a plain-clothed New York police officer - so think
twice," Shea said.
The 26 incidents so far have resulted in seven arrests, police
said. Those incidents included 12 assaults so far this year,
three of them last weekend, police said. By comparison, at this
time last year, there were no assaults reported against
Asian-Americans, police said.
Because hate crimes too often go unreported, now anyone dialing
911 can utter a single English word for their native language -
such as Mandarin - and police operators will help access
translators who speak more than 200 languages, police said.
Advocates tied the surge in hate crimes to blame that has been
placed on the Asian-American Pacific Islander community for the
coronavirus spread. The community reported a spike in violence
since March 2020, when then-President Donald Trump started
repeatedly referring to COVID-19 as the "China virus" and "kung
flu," which some said inflamed anti-Asian sentiment.
Hate crimes against Asian Americans rose by 149% in 2020 in 16
major cities compared with 2019, according to the Center for the
Study of Hate and Extremism. Violent incidents included people
being slashed with a box cutter, lit on fire and verbal
harassment, according to testimony at a U.S. congressional
hearing on anti-Asian violence convened this month.
The most deadly incident was this month's shooting spree at
three Atlanta area spas that left eight people dead, six of them
Asian women. A 21-year-old white man has been charged with
multiple counts of murder, and police investigating motives have
not ruled out the possibility that the attacks were provoked, at
least in part, by anti-immigrant or anti-Asian sentiments.
(Reporting by Barbara Goldberg; Editing by Steve Orlofsky)
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