FBI: US anti-Semitic hate crimes spiked 37 per cent in 2017

It is the third year in a row that such attacks have increased

epa07149993 YEARENDER OCTOBER 2018
Two women hug before placing flowers at the Star of David memorial in front of the Tree of Life Synagogue, two days after a mass shooting in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA, 29 October 2018. Officials report that 11 people were killed by the gunman identified as Robert Bowers who has been charged with hate crimes and other federal charges.  EPA/JARED WICKERHAM
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Hate crimes in the United States jumped 17 per cent in 2017, with a huge spike in anti-Semitic attacks, marking the third year in a row that such attacks have increased, according to FBI data released on Tuesday.

The release of the data comes just weeks after a gunman burst into a Pittsburgh synagogue and shot dead 11 worshippers while shouting "All Jews must die."

According to the FBI's annual Hate Crime Statistics report, there were a total of 7,175 hate crime incidents reported last year by law enforcement agencies, up from 6,121 incidents in 2016. The agency did not offer a reason for the increase.

Acting Attorney General Matthew Whitaker said in a statement that hate crimes were "despicable violations" of America's values.

"I am particularly troubled by the increase in anti-Semitic hate crimes," Whitaker said.

The report showed a 37 per cent jump in anti-Semitic incidents to 938 from 684 a year earlier.

The Pittsburgh synagogue massacre in late October fueled a debate ahead of the Nov. 6 national elections over U.S. President Donald Trump's inflammatory political rhetoric and his self-identification as a "nationalist."

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Pittsburgh synagogue gunman said he wanted all Jews to die

Eleven dead in Pittsburgh synagogue attack

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Critics say Trump's rhetoric has fomented a surge in right-wing extremism and may have even helped provoke the bloodshed at the Tree of Life Synagogue in Pittsburgh's Squirrel Hill neighborhood, which was the worst attack on America's Jewish community.

The Trump administration has rejected any notion that he has encouraged white nationalists and neo-Nazis who have embraced him, insisting the president's true aim is to unify America.

Nearly 16 per cent of the 4,131 incidents in 2017 involving race or ethnicity were fueled by anti-black or African-American bias, increasing to 2,013 from 1,739 in 2016, the FBI said.

Of the 6,370 known offenders in the report, about 50.7 per cent were white, while 21.3 per cent were Black or African-American.

The 2017 data was compiled from reports voluntarily submitted by 16,149 law enforcement agencies.

FBI officials said the agency will provide training next year for law enforcement officers on how to identify bias-motivated incidents and report that data to federal authorities.