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'Hate Crimes': A One-Way Street?
Wes Vernon
Tuesday, March 6, 2001
A pattern has emerged in the mainstream media in dealing with "hate crimes”:
i.e. violent criminal acts motivated by bigotry. The unspoken, unwritten
ethic appears to be: If a white commits a violent crime and the victim is a
minority, that is by definition a "hate crime” and worthy of front-page
headlines, complete with lead stories on the national TV news shows.
On the other hand, if a minority commits a violent crime and the victim is
white, that does not make it beyond the local media.

That is the inescapable conclusion of a NewsMax.com survey of events over a
period of months.

The Wichita Rampage

The most egregious recent example concerns a crime rampage in Wichita, Kan.

Two young black brothers, Reginald and Jonathan Carr, have been charged with
a quadruple homicide.

The Shreveport Times, one of the few out-of-state media outlets to give this
story any publicity at all, described the chronology of the crime in which
the two men abducted five white young adults and shot them execution-style,
according to the allegations in police reports.

According to police:

It began on a night in mid-December when they kicked in the door of a home
shared by three young professionals. Two women were there for an engagement
party. While one held the five people at gunpoint, the other loaded up a van
with two TVs, a computer, dishes, bedding, luggage, credit cards, and wallets.

They also found a diamond ring.

"That was for you,” Jason Befort told one of the young women. "I was going to
ask you to marry me.”

The Carr brothers then forced the young people to take them to automatic
teller machines and withdraw money.

So that’s a sheer case of robbery, right? Where’s the "hate crime”?

There’s more. Apparently not at all satisfied with the heist, the Carrs then
drove their victims to a soccer field and took turns raping the women, while
the three men were forced to watch. Then the men were forced to commit
homosexual acts on each other. Then each was forced to have sex with the
women while the Carr brothers drank beer and laughed.

Still nude, all five were ordered to kneel in front of the car’s headlights
in the snow. Each was shot in the back of the head execution-style before the
brothers drove off and left them for dead.

Four of them did indeed die. But the fifth, Jason Befort’s fiancée, feigned
death, then got up, bleeding from head to toe, and walked a mile in subzero
weather to the nearest house, where an elderly couple called 911.

It was later learned that this was the last stop on a crime rampage wherein
the two black men had robbed a convenience store, kidnapped a man the next
day and pistol-whipped him after forcing him to withdraw money from an ATM
before letting him go, and violently robbed a 55-year old cellist with the
Wichita Symphony Orchestra and shot her in the spine. She died about three
weeks later.

The district attorney in Wichita has concluded none of these crimes was
motivated by racial hatred.

That has drawn a howl of protest from many in the community. Aside from the
fact that the victims were of a different racial group than the perpetrators,
they note the following:


1 — The extreme sadism and violence went way beyond what was necessary to
successfully complete a robbery.

2 - As far as anyone knows, there was no warrant issued to search the
residences of the accused to determine if they may have been motivated by
racial hate literature.

3 - There is no record of questioning close friends, family, neighbors or
associates to determine if the two brothers had at any time expressed
anti-white bigotry.
NewMax.com asked the local newspaper, the Wichita Eagle, to send us the
original story of the violence involving the Carr brothers, which was done.
However, when we later asked for any information as to possible controversy
on the "ethnic” or "cultural” angles to the crime, the newspaper did not
respond.

The question is relevant in light of the coast-to-coast, wall-to-wall,
night-after-night coverage of the outrageous murders of Matthew Shepherd, a
gay man in Wyoming, and James Byrd Jr., a black man in Texas. In both of
these cases, law enforcement authorities went the extra mile to establish
that a "hate crime” had been committed. Why, critics wonder, has there been
no publicly acknowledged similar investigation in the Wichita case?

Ignored by the Media

Other examples of a news blackout of reverse "hate crimes" include:


In Arkansas, two homosexuals were charged with sodomizing and killing 13-year
old Jesse Dirkhising. The boy died from suffocation after being bound, gagged
with underwear in his mouth, blindfolded, taped to the bed, and sodomized by
one gay man, while another gay man watched.
This happened shortly after the Matthew Shepherd killing. The latter was big
national news. For months, the former did not get beyond the borders of
Arkansas. Even after the Washington Times ran the story, the rest of the
national media did not give it significant coverage.


On Feb. 28, a story in the Seattle Post-Intelligencer reported on Mardi Gras
or "Fat Tuesday” celebrations in that city wherein 72 people were treated in
hospitals, including two with "life-threatening” injuries. The PI story makes
no mention of a racial angle. But one of its accompanying photos shows at
least five black men surrounding a white woman in what appears to be a
threatening manner. Has a "hate crime” investigation begun in this case?

A convicted child molester, Nathaniel Bar-Jonah, was released by
Massachusetts authorities only to be nabbed a few years later in Montana,
charged with butchering a 10-year-old boy in Great Falls and dining on his
remains with unsuspecting friends. Was the nation informed by the national
media of this possible "hate crime”?

Most of the world is well aware of the New York City police officers charged
with shooting a black man whom they mistook for a wanted rapist. The officers
were ultimately acquitted, but not before a long trial filled with political
ramifications.
Later, when another police officer shot a minority who was not guilty of a
crime, the heat of the New York media was turned not on the police officer
but on Mayor Rudy Guiliani, a perennial target of racial demagogues such as
Al Sharpton. Little, if any, attention was paid to the police officer in this
case. I learned later, in reading a column, that this particular officer was
himself a minority, a Hispanic man.

Question: Does the uneven "justice” meted out to the officers in these two
cases in and of itself constitute a "hate crime” of sorts?


In 1999, a gunman entered a Fort Worth Baptist Church and massacred seven
people, shouting, "I can’t believe you believe this junk!”
ABC’s Dean Reynolds said the FBI found "writings that condemned religion and
law enforcement.” But did the media that had tried to connect Matthew
Shepherd’s murder with religious conservatives now use that same standard to
make a connection in this case with those who castigate religion?

No national media outlet mentioned this as a "hate crime.” Instead, this was
an opportunity to beat the drums for the old left-wing chestnut, "gun
control.”


In June of last year, New York City’s annual Puerto Rican Day parade was the
scene of violence against more than 50 women.
The Electronic Telegraph reported: "Reeking of alcohol and marijuana, 15 to
25 men surged through the busy south-east corner of the [Central] park …
spraying their victims with water and beer, tearing off their clothes and
sexually abusing them.”

Later, National Review would comment that "the New York Times and liberals in
general are bending over backwards to avoid the simple observation that the
young men who harassed and assaulted women in Central Park were all blacks
and Hispanics.”

No national TV outcry about "hate crimes” here.

The New York police, in this case, were accused of not moving aggressively
enough to rescue the women and dealing with the perpetrators. Some believed
that with the battering the police had taken from racial demagogues in the
city, police officers did not relish another political assault accompanying
TV videos of the uniformed police night-sticking minorities. It was as if
they were saying, "Next time you need a cop, call Al Sharpton.”

The double standard has extended beyond "hate crimes.”

The Unabomber-Gore Connection

The Oklahoma City bombing, which was, in reality, mass murder, resulted in a
Clintonian assault on conservative talk show hosts and the Republican House
leadership, notwithstanding the lack of any connection whatsoever.

But when the Unabomber, Ted Kaczynski was collared in Montana, and found with
Al Gore’s "Earth in the Balance” heavily underlined, no dots were connected
there in any national news stories or, of course, at the Clinton White House.

Examples are endless. Many thoughtful Americans are wondering when and if we
are going to get back to considering a violent crime an abominable act
regardless of who is the perpetrator or the victim.

Columnist Paul Craig Roberts says the assault on white males has been going
on for three decades. He compares it to the assault on Jews by German
intellectuals during the half century before the rise of Hitler.

There are those who note that George W. Bush drew 27 percent of the black
vote when he sought re-election as governor of Texas in 1998. This is
phenomenal for a Republican and perhaps a sign that the president who says he
is "a uniter, not a divider” can finally bring the country together despite
his failure to do as well with the black vote in his run for president.

His opposition to a Texas "hate crimes” bill indicates President Bush
considers this kind of legislation to be divisive. Judges and juries have the
responsibility of determining, case by case, when a violent crime merits
extra punishment for an especially evil motive.

Many who have ventured to speculate on the outlook for the 21st century see a
picture that is not pretty. They see terrorism on the rise on American soil,
to say nothing of threats of nuclear and biological warfare.

It can be argued that at this juncture of our history, Americans need each
other as never before, and that we can best help each other with a
de-emphasis on "tribal prejudice” and an increasing emphasis on the
commonality of our experience as Americans.




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