Culture Washington poised to enact hate crime hotline where residents can report bias incidents - The Senate bill now heads to Gov. Jay Inslee's desk


Washington could have a new hate crime hotline as early as 2025 thanks to a recently passed bill.

Senate Bill 5427, sponsored by Sen. Javier Valdez, D-Seattle, successfully passed the state House on Wednesday with unanimous support from Democrats and largely Republican opposition. The bill stated that the attorney general’s office "shall oversee a hate crimes and bias incidents hotline staffed during business hours and dedicated to assisting people who have been targeted or affected by hate crimes and bias incidents."

The hotline would primarily "identify local service providers and culturally specific services" with a focus on "historically underserved communities." In addition, the office would establish an advisory committee with "diverse and inclusive representation" to provide advice and assistance.

The bill stated that a pilot hotline program must be developed and implemented in at least three Washington counties by July 2025 with the program available to all counties by January 2027. By July 2027, the attorney general’s office will be obligated to provide information regarding hate crimes and bias incidents reported to the hotline with an annual report available to the public.

It will now go to Gov. Jay Inslee’s desk to be signed into law.

Senate Bill 5427 previously failed to pass the state Senate’s Ways and Means Committee in 2023 with critics attacking the bill as a "tattletale hotline" encouraging people to "cash in" on hate crimes based on one of the bill’s provisions.

"The attorney general's office may provide compensation to persons targeted or affected by hate crimes and bias incidents by authorizing expenditures from the Washington hate crime and bias incident account, established in section 3 of this act, up to a maximum of $2,000 per person targeted or affected by a specific hate crime or bias incident, subject to the availability of funds in the account and the requirements of this act," the original House bill read.

The latest Senate bill did not include references to compensation for "affected" persons.

Washington's lawmakers approved creating a category of hate crimes in 2019, which defined such a crime as one in which a perpetrator intentionally or maliciously causes physical harm to another person based on race, sex, sexual orientation, religion, nationality and other identities.

According to the attorney general’s office, hate crimes are considered a Class C felony in the state punishable by up to five years in prison and/or a $100,000 fine. Hate crime victims can also bring civil lawsuits against their perpetrators for damage compensation of up to $100,000 along with attorney fees.

Fox News' Emma Colton contributed to this report.

Lindsay Kornick is an associate editor for Fox News Digital. Story tips can be sent to lindsay.kornick@fox.com and on Twitter: @lmkornick.
 
Sounds unconstitutional.

I see a pattern in dipshits pushing blatantly unconstitutional stuff, with the expectation that it'll get shot down. But by the time it gets shot down, they still manage to farm accolades from their asspatters, just for trying it but "that mean constitution / due process won't let us do it".

It's virtue signalling paid for with legislative and judicial hours.

Like I think a decent chunk of the people pushing these proposals don't actually care when they get overturned in court, just because their aims were already achieved by that point.
 
Hello is this the hate crime reporting hotline?

>Yes. Do you believe you are a victim of a bias incident?

Yes, I was filling up at a gas station and attacked. The guy beating me said I was in the wrong neighborhood.


>My God, sir. This is horrible. Please hold, I am going to get the FBI and Attorney General on the line.

Wow, thanks for all the help! I never knew the government could be so responsive and caring.

>Of course, sir. We take all crimes against BIPOC or LGBT people seriously.

Oh sorry, I'm White.


Click

Hello? Helllooo?
 
Hell just walk down the wrong street wearing an "all lives matter" tshirt and then ring them up for the half dozen or so slurs that get sent your way. You don't even need to make up fake incidents.
 
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:story:

The secret is being a Democrat. Then you'll be allowed to call people nigger all day long!

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The hotline would primarily "identify local service providers and culturally specific services" with a focus on "historically underserved communities."
This is what it's really about- grift for LCSWs, LPCs, PMHNPs, acupuncturists, et al, who checked a minority box on a form and are friends with politicians.
 
  • Agree
Reactions: tehpope
Oh hey. A snitching program that works the same as the Soviet one! Except this age has shitposters so it should be entertaining.

I'm certain the response is gonna be varied.

>Black perp, white victim
>No response needed. All is well.

>White perp, white victim
>Who cares?

>Black perp, Black victim
>Let's not record this and ignore

>White perp, black victim
>Call the media! Make an example of em!

>((Elite)) perp, any victim
>Call a kill squad on the reporter, ensure that they commit suicide with 2 bullets at the back of the head.
 
So there I was walking down the street and a MAGA hat wearing chud swaggers up to me and grabs my balls, then he pulls me closer and whispers softly into my ear.

"The Jew fears the Samurai."
Yeah I’m sorry about that, I was really drunk and I honestly don’t remember what I meant by that.
 
People seem to forget these kinds of hotlines have existed for decades. Lots of neighborhood watch programs have them and crimestoppers hot line has been a thing for a long time at this point. Its the same thing just called something different
 
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Reactions: Termina and Marvin
Ripe for abuse, and of course whites' reports will go in the trash, along with anything against LGBT.
 
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